Consciousness and Cognition | 2021

The discrepant effect of acute stress on cognitive inhibition and response inhibition

 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


This study aimed to investigate how acute stress impinges on individual s cognitive inhibition and response inhibition abilities. Electroencephalography was adopted when 35 healthy adult females performing the No Go Flanker task before and after the Trier Social Stress Test. Both inhibition processes evoked N2 and P3 components, but only the response inhibition evoked the late positive potential (LPP), indicating the response inhibition needed continuous cognitive effort to inhibit the prepotent response. The N2 and the P3 amplitudes were decreased, while the LPP amplitudes were increased under acute stress. These results suggested that acute stress caused the detrimental effect by occupying cognitive resources. Contrastingly, individuals actively regulated and made more efforts to counteract the detrimental effect of acute stress on response inhibition. Thus, acute stress impaired cognitive inhibition but did not affect response inhibition.

Volume 91
Pages None
DOI 10.1016/j.concog.2021.103131
Language English
Journal Consciousness and Cognition

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