Associations between perceived stress and attention: Endogenous and exogenous task performance

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Authors

Canovas, Cossette

Issue Date

2017

Type

Thesis

Language

en_US

Keywords

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Alternative Title

Abstract

The relationship between stress and attention has not been adequately studied. Whether stress enhances or impairs attention and the mechanism by which stress affects attention is the subject of much debate �" does stress impair attention? To test the hypothesis that high stress impairs attention, especially in an endogenous attention task, 126 college students were recruited to participate in two studies relating to stress and attention. Participants completed the Perceived Stress Scale and performed either an endogenous attention or exogenous attention modified cueing task. Stress scores were used to categorize participants into stress groups and accuracy was compared to each group per study type. No significant results were found between stress and accuracy on either endogenous or exogenous attention. The results suggest that stress may not affect attention at all. The significance of this result is that stress may not affect performance in high-stress situations. However, limitations with our study may have reduced our ability to detect the true relationship.

Description

The University of Nevada, Reno Libraries will promptly respond to removal requests related to content that violates intellectual property laws, data protections, or has been uploaded without creator consent. Takedown notices should be directed to our ScholarWolf team (scholarwolf@library.unr.edu) with information about the object, including its full URL and the nature of your complaint.

Citation

Publisher

License

Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 United States

Journal

Volume

Issue

PubMed ID

DOI

ISSN

EISSN