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BRIEF ARTICLE

Anxiety and retrieval inhibition: support for an enhanced inhibition account

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Pages 349-359 | Received 27 Mar 2014, Accepted 01 Sep 2015, Published online: 05 Oct 2015
 

ABSTRACT

Retrieval inhibition of negative associations is important for exposure therapy for anxiety, but the relationship between memory inhibition and anxiety is not well understood—anxiety could either be associated with enhanced or deficient inhibition. The present study tested these two competing hypotheses by measuring retrieval inhibition of negative stimuli by related neutral stimuli. Non-clinically anxious undergraduates completed measures of trait and state anxiety and completed a retrieval induced forgetting task. Adaptive forgetting varied with state anxiety. Low levels of state anxiety were associated with no evidence for retrieval inhibition for either threatening or non-threatening categories. Participants in the middle tertile of state anxiety scores exhibited retrieval inhibition for non-threatening categories but not for threatening categories. Participants in the highest tertile of state anxiety, however, exhibited retrieval inhibition for both threatening and non-threatening categories with the magnitude of retrieval inhibition being greater for threatening than non-threatening categories. The data are in line with the avoidance aspect of the vigilance–avoidance theory of anxiety and inhibition. Implications for cognitive behavioural therapy practices are discussed.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Notes

1 Generation practice is done with a two letter stem cue in order to make generation practice more likely to be successful. Only one letter cue is used at test to avoid ceiling effects of word recall. This is why no two words in a category start with the same letter.

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