Colour-identification of differentially valenced words in anxiety

Abstract Two groups of individuals, one high in trait anxiety and the other low in trait anxiety, performed a Stroop task in which threat, neutral, and pleasant words were presented. The results indicated clear differences between the high- and low-trait groups in their performance on this task. The low-trait group's performance was similar for all three types of sitmuli, whereas the high-trait group's responses were fastest for pleasant stimuli and slowest for threat-related stimuli. A recognition task to examine incidental learning of the “irrelevant” Stroop words showed that whilst the high-trait group had a stronger tendency to respond positively to all trials (critical and distractor) than the low-trait group, there were no differences in sensitivity between the two groups.

[1]  J. Williams Cognitive Psychology and Emotional Disorders , 1991 .

[2]  J. Williams,et al.  Distraction by emotional stimuli: use of a Stroop task with suicide attempters. , 1986, The British journal of clinical psychology.

[3]  F P McKenna,et al.  Colour naming of phobia-related words. , 1986, British journal of psychology.

[4]  M. Eysenck,et al.  Clinical Anxiety and Cognition , 1987 .

[5]  M. Eysenck,et al.  Trait Anxiety and Cognition , 1987 .

[6]  C. MacLeod,et al.  Selective processing of threat cues in anxiety states. , 1985, Behaviour research and therapy.

[7]  G. Bower Mood and memory. , 1981, The American psychologist.