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Original Articles

Cognitive trait anxiety, stress and effort interact to predict inhibitory control

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Pages 671-686 | Received 18 Mar 2015, Accepted 03 Feb 2016, Published online: 02 Mar 2016
 

ABSTRACT

Few studies have focussed on the link between anxiety and inhibitory control in the absence of stimulus-driven external threat. This two-part experiment examined the interactions between (1) somatic trait anxiety, somatic situational stress (i.e. threat of electric shock), and effort, and (2) cognitive trait anxiety, cognitive situational stress (i.e. ego-threat instructions), and effort, on inhibitory processes using a Go-No-Go paradigm. Trait anxiety was operationalised using questionnaire scores and effort was operationalised using a visual analogue scale. Performance effectiveness was measured using the d′ parameter from signal detection theory and processing efficiency was indexed by the ratio of d′ to response time on correct trials. Results indicated that somatic trait anxiety and stress did not predict effectiveness or efficiency. Cognitive trait anxiety and stress were associated with both inhibitory effectiveness and efficiency deficits; however, contrary to expectations these deficits were evident at higher rather than lower mental effort. Results suggest a distinction between how somatic and cognitive anxiety manifest on tasks involving inhibitory control.

Acknowledgements

Elizabeth Edwards was awarded an Australian Postgraduate Award Scholarship and a Queensland Smart Futures Top-up Scholarship to conduct this research. Special thanks go to John Zhong for assistance with the experimental programming. We acknowledge the contributions of Ernst Koster and two anonymous reviewers who helped us improve this manuscript.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

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