When does anxiety help or hinder cognitive test performance? The role of working memory capacity
When does anxiety help or hinder cognitive test performance? The role of working memory capacity
Cognitive interference theories (e.g. attentional control theory, processing efficiency theory) suggest that high levels of trait anxiety predict adverse effects on the performance of cognitive tasks, particularly those that make high demands on cognitive resources. We tested an interaction hypothesis to determine whether a combination of high anxiety and low working memory capacity (WMC) would predict variance in demanding cognitive test scores. Ninety six adolescents (12- to 14-years-old) participated in the study, which measured self-report levels of trait anxiety, working memory, and cognitive test performance. As hypothesized, we found that the anxiety-WMC interaction explained a significant amount of variance in cognitive test performance (?R2 .07, p < .01). Trait anxiety was unrelated to cognitive test performance for those adolescents with average WMC scores (? = .13, p > .10). In contrast, trait anxiety was negatively related to test performance in adolescents with low WMC (? = ?.35, p < .05) and positively related to test performance in those with high WMC (? = .49, p < .01). The results of this study suggest that WMC moderates the relationship between anxiety and cognitive test performance and may be a determinant factor in explaining some discrepancies found in the literature. Further research is needed to fully understand the mechanisms involved.
1-10
Owens, Matthew
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Stevenson, Jim
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Hadwin, Julie A.
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Norgate, Roger
4aa4c5c2-f6bc-423b-a806-48d3c447e15b
Owens, Matthew
bdb0dd82-db76-4106-806e-2ab06629d132
Stevenson, Jim
0c85d29b-d294-43cb-ab8d-75e4737478e1
Hadwin, Julie A.
a364caf0-405a-42f3-a04c-4864817393ee
Norgate, Roger
4aa4c5c2-f6bc-423b-a806-48d3c447e15b
Owens, Matthew, Stevenson, Jim, Hadwin, Julie A. and Norgate, Roger
(2012)
When does anxiety help or hinder cognitive test performance? The role of working memory capacity.
British Journal of Psychology, n/a, .
(doi:10.1111/bjop.12009).
Abstract
Cognitive interference theories (e.g. attentional control theory, processing efficiency theory) suggest that high levels of trait anxiety predict adverse effects on the performance of cognitive tasks, particularly those that make high demands on cognitive resources. We tested an interaction hypothesis to determine whether a combination of high anxiety and low working memory capacity (WMC) would predict variance in demanding cognitive test scores. Ninety six adolescents (12- to 14-years-old) participated in the study, which measured self-report levels of trait anxiety, working memory, and cognitive test performance. As hypothesized, we found that the anxiety-WMC interaction explained a significant amount of variance in cognitive test performance (?R2 .07, p < .01). Trait anxiety was unrelated to cognitive test performance for those adolescents with average WMC scores (? = .13, p > .10). In contrast, trait anxiety was negatively related to test performance in adolescents with low WMC (? = ?.35, p < .05) and positively related to test performance in those with high WMC (? = .49, p < .01). The results of this study suggest that WMC moderates the relationship between anxiety and cognitive test performance and may be a determinant factor in explaining some discrepancies found in the literature. Further research is needed to fully understand the mechanisms involved.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 15 October 2012
Organisations:
Psychology
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Local EPrints ID: 351254
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/351254
ISSN: 0007-1269
PURE UUID: 9d190ccb-9054-422a-a545-3134ba5f5c01
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Date deposited: 17 Apr 2013 10:00
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 13:37
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Author:
Matthew Owens
Author:
Roger Norgate
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