Biological Psychology | 2021

Trait anxiety modulates the temporal dynamics of Stroop task switching: An ERP study

 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


The current study aimed to find neural evidence that trait anxiety interferes with one s shifting function processing efficiency. Twenty-five high trait-anxiety (HTA) and twenty-five low trait-anxiety (LTA) participants were instructed to complete a cue-based Stroop task-switching assessment of shifting function. No group difference in behavioral performance was shown, though event-related potential (ERP) results in the cue-locked period showed that only the LTA group had a general switch benefit in contingent negative variation (CNV) amplitude, indicating the LTA group exerted less task preparation effort. In the subsequent target-locked period, compared to the LTA group, the local switch cost of target-P3 was higher in the HTA group in incompatible trials, suggesting inefficient attentional resource allocation in the HTA group in incompatible trials. These ERP findings indicated that the HTA group ultimately achieved comparable behavioral performance with the LTA group at the expense of using more compensatory strategies at the neural level.

Volume 163
Pages None
DOI 10.1016/j.biopsycho.2021.108144
Language English
Journal Biological Psychology

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