| Literature DB >> 32839468 |
Gabriel Reyes1, Anastassia Vivanco-Carlevari1, Franco Medina1, Carolina Manosalva2, Vincent de Gardelle3, Jérôme Sackur4,5, Jaime R Silva6,7,8.
Abstract
It is well established that acute stress produces negative effects on high level cognitive functions. However, these effects could be due to the physiological components of the stress response (among which cortisol secretion is prominent), to its psychological concomitants (the thoughts generated by the stressor) or to any combination of those. Our study shows for the first time that the typical cortisol response to stress is sufficient to impair metacognition, that is the ability to monitor one's own performance in a task. In a pharmacological protocol, we administered either 20 mg hydrocortisone or placebo to 46 male participants, and measured their subjective perception of stress, their performance in a perceptual task, and their metacognitive ability. We found that hydrocortisone selectively impaired metacognitive ability, without affecting task performance or creating a subjective state of stress. In other words, the single physiological response of stress produces a net effect on metacognition. These results inform our basic understanding of the physiological bases of metacognition. They are also relevant for applied or clinical research about situations involving stress, anxiety, depression, or simply cortisol use.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32839468 PMCID: PMC7445749 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-71061-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(A) Session 1 Personality trait questionnaires were assessed on an online platform. For Session 2, the pharmacological induction (placebo / hydrocortisone) was administered prior to the metacognitive task. Seven saliva samples and three STAI-S questionnaires were implemented. C0 and the first STAI-S were baseline measures, taken 20 min after the participant arrived at the lab. C1 and the second STAI-S assessment were sampled 30 min after drug administration, C2 to C5 were taken in when the task was paused, and C6 with the third STAI-S questionnaire was measured 30 min after the end of the metacognitive task. (B) Metacognitive task structure.
Figure 2Comparison between Placebo and Hydrocortisone groups. The different panels represent (A1) cortisol concentration in saliva samples (power transformed40), (A2) perceived stress (as measured by the STAI-S), (B1) stimulus contrast, (B2) response times (in seconds), (C1) the metacognitive efficiency in the perceptual task (md-Ratio), (C2) type 1 sensitivity in the perceptual task (in d’ units), (D1) mean confidence (on a half-scale from .5 to 1) and (D2) confidence estimates in a serial dependency analysis. On each panel, dots and error bars represent the mean and standard error across participants, separately for Placebo group (in blue) and the Hydrocortisone group (in red). Labels (C0–C6) correspond to the cortisol samples, with (C0) being the baseline. Labels (B1–B5) correspond to the experimental blocks.