Stress-related disorders, e.g., anxiety and depression, are characterized by decreased top-down control for distracting information, as well as a memory bias for threatening information. However, it is unclear how acute stress biases mnemonic encoding and leads to prioritized storage of threat-related information even if outside the focus of attention. In the current study, healthy adults (N = 53, all male) were randomly assigned to stress induction using the socially evaluated cold-pressor test (SECPT) or a control condition. Participants performed a task in which they were required to identify a target letter within a string of letters that were either identical to the target and thereby facilitating detection (low distractor load) or mix...
BACKGROUND: A vital component of an organism's response to acute stress is a surge in vigilance that...
Stress influences how we remember emotional events and how these events shape future behaviors. Howe...
Stress can exert profound effects on memory encoding. Here, we investigated whether (sub)cortical in...
Item does not contain fulltextStress-related disorders, e.g., anxiety and depression, are characteri...
Stressful, aversive events are extremely well remembered. Such a declarative memory enhancement is e...
Eyewitnesses may experience stress during a crime and when attempting to identify the perpetrator su...
Eyewitnesses may experience stress during a crime and when attempting to identify the perpetrator su...
Eyewitnesses may experience stress during a crime and when attempting to identify the perpetrator su...
Eyewitnesses may experience stress during a crime and when attempting to identify the perpetrator su...
Contains fulltext : 81492.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Stressful, avers...
The present study investigated the effect of acute stress on attentional bias to threa...
For the selection of relevant information out of a continuous stream of information, which is a comm...
In the current study, the aim was to investigate whether attentional bias—an automatic and nonconsci...
Unwanted imaginations of future fears can, to some extent, be avoided. This is achieved by control m...
Unwanted imaginations of future fears can, to some extent, be avoided. This is achieved by control m...
BACKGROUND: A vital component of an organism's response to acute stress is a surge in vigilance that...
Stress influences how we remember emotional events and how these events shape future behaviors. Howe...
Stress can exert profound effects on memory encoding. Here, we investigated whether (sub)cortical in...
Item does not contain fulltextStress-related disorders, e.g., anxiety and depression, are characteri...
Stressful, aversive events are extremely well remembered. Such a declarative memory enhancement is e...
Eyewitnesses may experience stress during a crime and when attempting to identify the perpetrator su...
Eyewitnesses may experience stress during a crime and when attempting to identify the perpetrator su...
Eyewitnesses may experience stress during a crime and when attempting to identify the perpetrator su...
Eyewitnesses may experience stress during a crime and when attempting to identify the perpetrator su...
Contains fulltext : 81492.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Stressful, avers...
The present study investigated the effect of acute stress on attentional bias to threa...
For the selection of relevant information out of a continuous stream of information, which is a comm...
In the current study, the aim was to investigate whether attentional bias—an automatic and nonconsci...
Unwanted imaginations of future fears can, to some extent, be avoided. This is achieved by control m...
Unwanted imaginations of future fears can, to some extent, be avoided. This is achieved by control m...
BACKGROUND: A vital component of an organism's response to acute stress is a surge in vigilance that...
Stress influences how we remember emotional events and how these events shape future behaviors. Howe...
Stress can exert profound effects on memory encoding. Here, we investigated whether (sub)cortical in...