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BRIEF REPORTS

Individual differences at high perceptual load: The relation between trait anxiety and selective attention

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Pages 747-755 | Received 20 Oct 2009, Accepted 02 Jun 2010, Published online: 05 Oct 2010
 

Abstract

Attentional control theory (Eysenck et al., 2007) posits that taxing attentional resources impairs performance efficiency in anxious individuals. This theory, however, does not explicitly address if or how the relation between anxiety and attentional control depends upon the perceptual demands of the task at hand. Consequently, the present study examined the relation between trait anxiety and task performance using a perceptual load task (Maylor & Lavie, 1998). Sixty-eight male college students completed a visual search task that indexed processing of irrelevant distractors systematically across four levels of perceptual load. Results indicated that anxiety was related to difficulty suppressing the behavioural effects of irrelevant distractors (i.e., decreased reaction time efficiency) under high, but not low, perceptual loads. In contrast, anxiety was not associated with error rates on the task. These findings are consistent with the prediction that anxiety is associated with impairments in performance efficiency under conditions that tax attentional resources.

Acknowledgements

Naomi Sadeh was supported by NIMH grant F31 MH086178.

Notes

1The data for these participants were drawn from a larger sample reported in Sadeh and Verona (Citation2008).

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