4.5 Article

The Effect of Negative Affect on Cognition: Anxiety, Not Anger, Impairs Executive Function

Journal

EMOTION
Volume 16, Issue 6, Pages 792-797

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/emo0000151

Keywords

executive function; negative affect; anxiety; anger; set-shifting

Funding

  1. University of California, Davis
  2. Hellman Foundation
  3. National Institutes of Health [MH059352]

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It is often assumed that negative affect impairs the executive functions that underlie our ability to control and focus our thoughts. However, support for this claim has been mixed. Recent work has suggested that different negative affective states like anxiety and anger may reflect physiologically separable states with distinct effects on cognition. However, the effects of these 2 affective states on executive function have never been assessed. As such, we induced anxiety or anger in participants and examined the effects on executive function. We found that anger did not impair executive function relative to a neutral mood, whereas anxiety did. In addition, self-reports of induced anxiety, but not anger, predicted impairments in executive function. These results support functional models of affect and cognition, and highlight the need to consider differences between anxiety and anger when investigating the influence of negative affect on fundamental cognitive processes such as memory and executive function.

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