| Literature DB >> 31945068 |
Emily C Daniels1, Andrew Rodriguez1, Darya L Zabelina1.
Abstract
The present study aimed to investigate the extent to which the severity of misophonia symptoms is linked with cognitive control under misophonia symptom-provocation circumstances in the general population sample. Participants (N = 79) completed a measure of cognitive control-a Stroop color naming task, which consists of congruent and incongruent stimuli, and requires inhibition of a prepotent response (reading a word) in the service of a less predominant response (naming a color), while listening to misophonia symptom-provocation or universally unpleasant sounds. Participants' misophonia sound sensitivity, and emotional behaviors towards trigger sounds were assessed using the Misophonia Questionnaire. Stronger emotional behavioral reactions to misophonia trigger sounds were significantly associated with the larger Stroop effect when participants were exposed to the misophonia trigger sounds, but not when they were exposed to the universally unpleasant sounds. This effect held when controlling for the personality trait of Neuroticism and for baseline levels of anxiety. Both elevated misophonia sound sensitivity and emotional behaviors towards trigger sounds significantly correlated with higher self-reported anxiety when performing the Stroop task. However, only elevated emotional behaviors towards trigger sounds were linked with higher anxiety levels at baseline, suggesting that people who experience stronger emotions and behavioral reactions to misophonia trigger sounds may have higher anxiety at a trait level. Limitations and future directions are discussed.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31945068 PMCID: PMC6964854 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0227118
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Distribution of Scores for MQ Sound Sensitivity (1a) and MQ Emotional Behaviors Towards Trigger Sounds (1b).
Zero-order correlations among MQ sound sensitivity, MQ emotional behaviors towards trigger sounds, MQ total score, and performance on the Stroop task.
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. MQ Sound Sensitivity | -- | .61 | .90 | .18 | .09 | .27 | .18 |
| 2. MQ Emotional Behaviors to Trigger Sounds | -- | .90 | .25 | .17 | .27 | .23 | |
| 3. MQ total | -- | .24 | .14 | .30 | .23 | ||
| 4. Stroop Effect RT—Misophonia Sounds | -- | .24 | .14 | .30 | |||
| 5. Stroop Effect RT—Unpleasant Sounds | -- | .45 | .48 | ||||
| 6. Stroop Total RT—Misophonia Sounds | -- | .94 | |||||
| 7. Stroop Total RT—Unpleasant Sounds | -- | ||||||
| Mean | 11.47 | 11.51 | 22.97 | 107.40 | 100.08 | 688.73 | 676.04 |
| 6.15 | 6.48 | 11.32 | 80.22 | 73.84 | 165.75 | 149.80 |
MQ = Misophonia Questionnaire, RT = reaction times.
* p < .05
Fig 2Pearson correlation between Misophonia Questionnaire (MQ) emotional behaviors to trigger sounds and the Stroop effect while exposed to the misophonia trigger sounds.
Linear regression analysis predicting Stroop effect when exposed to misophonia sounds.
| B | SE | 95% CI | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DV: Stroop Effect RT—Misophonia Sounds | ||||||
| MQ Emotional Behavior | 3.40 | 1.54 | .27 | 2.21 | .03 | [.33; 6.47] |
| Neuroticism | -6.76 | 11.83 | -.07 | -.57 | .57 | [-30.34; 16.81] |
MQ = Misophonia Questionnaire, STAI = State-Trait Anxiety Inventory; RT = reaction times.
Zero-order correlations among MQ sound sensitivity, MQ emotional behaviors towards trigger sounds, MQ total score, and anxiety scores.
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. MQ Sound Sensitivity | -- | .61 | .89 | -.01 | .36 | .29 |
| 2. MQ Emotional Behavior to Trigger Sounds | -- | .90 | .25 | .48 | .44 | |
| 3. MQ Total | -- | .14 | .46 | .41 | ||
| 4. STAI Baseline | -- | .46 | .56 | |||
| 5. STAI Misophonia Sounds | -- | .79 | ||||
| 6. STAI Unpleasant Sounds | -- |
*p < .013