| Literature DB >> 32292371 |
Mauricio Barrientos1, Leonel Tapia2, Jaime R Silva1, Gabriel Reyes1.
Abstract
Reaction to stressful events has an impact on several cognitive processes. High levels of stress can be detrimental to working memory, attention and decision-making. Here, we investigated whether individuals' reactivity to stress is related to their introspective sensitivity (i.e., how well individuals monitor their own cognitive processes). To this aim, 27 participants (16 women, mean 20 years old) were exposed to a psychosocial stress protocol (trier social stress test, TSST), where individuals were asked to simulate a job interview and perform arithmetic calculations in front of a panel of experts. The salivary cortisol concentration, which is considered a hormonal index of stress reactivity, was collected during the TSST through the enzyme immunoassay DRG cortisol ELISA kit. Based on literature recommendations, we classified participants as responders and non-responders to the TSST. In a second session, through a visual search paradigm, we evaluated the introspective sensitivity of the participants. We evaluated how these individuals (i) monitor their own performance (through a confidence estimation), (ii) monitor their own attentional shifts (through a subjective number of scanned items estimation, SNSI), and (iii) monitor their own response times (through an introspective response time estimation, iRT). We found that individuals with lower biological reactivity to stress are more accurate in estimating their SNSI (p = 0.033) and iRT (p = 0.002), and in evaluating their own performance (p = 0.038) through their confidence. We argue that the effect of stress on introspection is not limited to a particular type of introspective evaluation, but rather consists of a general alteration of the introspective mechanism.Entities:
Keywords: TSST; biological stress reactivity; consciousness; cortisol; introspection
Year: 2020 PMID: 32292371 PMCID: PMC7135889 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.00543
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
FIGURE 1(A) General structure of session 1. After a 10-min rest, the first saliva sample (C0) was taken as a baseline measure. C1 was taken immediately after a 20-min stress induction protocol (TSST). The next five cortisol measures (C2–C6) were taken in the following 90 min after stress induction. (B) General structure of the visual search task in session 2. After a fixation cross, participants were presented with one of two possible conditions: finding an L among a set of Ts or finding an X among a set of Ts. After the perceptual decision, three introspective scales were presented simultaneously: the SNSI scale, the iRT scale and a confidence scale. This session took place one week after session 1. N = 27.
FIGURE 2(A1) Cortisol concentration as a function of the TSST phase for both experimental groups. Error bars here and in the following analysis denote ±2 SE. (A2) Differences between experimental groups in cortisol production (AUCi) during the first session. (B1) Interaction between set-size and search type in perceptual performance (LISAS) during the second session. (B2) Comparison of performance by stress group, measured by LISAS, during the second session. N = 27. ***p < 0.001, n.s.p > 0.05.
FIGURE 3(A) Comparison of the misjudgments in the number of items revised (SNSI Error), by stress group. Error bars here and in the following analysis denote ±2 SE. (B) Regression of the introspective response time and the response time, by stress groups. (C) Comparison of the error in the estimation of the response times (iRT Error, calculated as the absolute value of RT minus iRT) by stress groups. (D) Regression of confidence and error rate, by stress groups. N = 27. *p < 0.05, ***p < 0.001.