Generalizability of Control Across Cognitive and Emotional Conflict

被引:2
作者
Straub, Elisa Ruth [1 ]
Schiltenwolf, Moritz [1 ]
Kiesel, Andrea [1 ]
Dignath, David [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Freiburg, Dept Psychol, Engelbergerstr 41, D-79085 Freiburg, Germany
[2] Univ Tubingen, Dept Psychol, Schleichstr 4, D-72076 Tubingen, Germany
关键词
cognitive conflict; emotional conflict; congruency sequence effect; cognitive control; Stroop task; ANTERIOR CINGULATE CORTEX; POSTTRAUMATIC-STRESS-DISORDER; WORKING-MEMORY CAPACITY; INDIVIDUAL-DIFFERENCES; RESPONSE CONFLICT; EXECUTIVE FUNCTIONS; CONTROL MECHANISMS; TASK CONFLICT; STROOP TASK; SEQUENTIAL MODULATIONS;
D O I
10.1037/xhp0001155
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
People can learn to control their thoughts and emotions. The scientific study of control has been conducted mostly independently for cognitive and emotional conflicts. However, recent theoretical proposals suggest a close link between emotional and cognitive control processes. Indeed, mounting evidence from clinical sciences, social and personality psychology, and developmental neuroscience suggests that the ability to control thoughts and behavior goes hand in hand with the ability to control emotions. Yet, the precise interface between control over cognition and emotions remains controversial. The present study investigates the question whether control is a general-purpose mechanism or rather a set of domain-specific mechanisms. Following previous research, we tested participants' control in a cognitive and an emotional Stroop task and assessed the congruency sequence effect (CSE) which has been taken as a marker of cognitive or (implicit) emotional control, respectively. Going beyond previous research, we asked how control in one domain (e.g., cognitive) interacts with control in the other domain (e.g., emotional) on a trial-by-trial basis. In four experiments (N = 259) presented participants with a task-switching design that intermixed cognitive and emotional conflicts. This procedure produced significant CSEs across cognitive-emotional domains, suggesting that control can interact across domains. However, effect sizes of within-domain CSEs were twice as large, indicating that control is also domain-specific. These results neither support the general-purpose account nor the domain-specificity hypothesis of control. Rather, a hybrid account fits the data best, which also reconciles previous behavioral and neurophysiological findings, suggesting domain-general and specific processes.
引用
收藏
页码:2 / 22
页数:21
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