Effect of Acute Psychological Stress on Speed Perception: An Event-Related Potential Study

Wang J, Yu L, Ding F, Qi C (2023)
Brain Sciences 13(3): 423.

Zeitschriftenaufsatz | Veröffentlicht | Englisch
 
Download
OA 2.72 MB
Autor*in
Wang, Jifu; Yu, LinUniBi ; Ding, Feng; Qi, Changzhu
Abstract / Bemerkung
The present study tested the intrinsic ERP features of the effects of acute psychological stress on speed perception. A mental arithmetic task was used to induce acute psychological stress, and the light spot task was used to evaluate speed perception. Compared with judgments in the constant speed and uniform acceleration motion, judgments in the uniform deceleration motion were made more quickly and with higher accuracy; attention control was higher and peaked later; and there was longer N2 peak latency, larger N2 peak amplitude, and lower mean amplitude of the late negative slow wave (SW). Under stress, the reaction time was significantly shorter. The N2 peak amplitude and SW mean amplitude were significantly higher, attention control was higher and appeared earlier, and there was a greater investment of cognitive resources. The type of movement and evoked stress also interacted to predict behavioral and ERP measures. Under acute stress, judgments made in the uniform deceleration motion condition elicited lower N2 peak latency, higher attention control, and later peak attention. The results suggest that judgments of the speed of decelerating motion require a lower investment of cognitive resources than judgments of other kinds of motion, especially under acute stress. These findings are best interpreted in terms of the interaction of arousal and attention.
Erscheinungsjahr
2023
Zeitschriftentitel
Brain Sciences
Band
13
Ausgabe
3
Art.-Nr.
423
eISSN
2076-3425
Page URI
https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/2978085

Zitieren

Wang J, Yu L, Ding F, Qi C. Effect of Acute Psychological Stress on Speed Perception: An Event-Related Potential Study. Brain Sciences. 2023;13(3): 423.
Wang, J., Yu, L., Ding, F., & Qi, C. (2023). Effect of Acute Psychological Stress on Speed Perception: An Event-Related Potential Study. Brain Sciences, 13(3), 423. https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci13030423
Wang, Jifu, Yu, Lin, Ding, Feng, and Qi, Changzhu. 2023. “Effect of Acute Psychological Stress on Speed Perception: An Event-Related Potential Study”. Brain Sciences 13 (3): 423.
Wang, J., Yu, L., Ding, F., and Qi, C. (2023). Effect of Acute Psychological Stress on Speed Perception: An Event-Related Potential Study. Brain Sciences 13:423.
Wang, J., et al., 2023. Effect of Acute Psychological Stress on Speed Perception: An Event-Related Potential Study. Brain Sciences, 13(3): 423.
J. Wang, et al., “Effect of Acute Psychological Stress on Speed Perception: An Event-Related Potential Study”, Brain Sciences, vol. 13, 2023, : 423.
Wang, J., Yu, L., Ding, F., Qi, C.: Effect of Acute Psychological Stress on Speed Perception: An Event-Related Potential Study. Brain Sciences. 13, : 423 (2023).
Wang, Jifu, Yu, Lin, Ding, Feng, and Qi, Changzhu. “Effect of Acute Psychological Stress on Speed Perception: An Event-Related Potential Study”. Brain Sciences 13.3 (2023): 423.
Alle Dateien verfügbar unter der/den folgenden Lizenz(en):
Creative Commons Namensnennung 4.0 International Public License (CC-BY 4.0):
Volltext(e)
Access Level
OA Open Access
Zuletzt Hochgeladen
2023-04-14T14:14:39Z
MD5 Prüfsumme
eb6ee05686bebaef562d46fc7add14ca


Link(s) zu Volltext(en)
Access Level
OA Open Access

Export

Markieren/ Markierung löschen
Markierte Publikationen

Open Data PUB

Web of Science

Dieser Datensatz im Web of Science®
Quellen

PMID: 36979233
PubMed | Europe PMC

Suchen in

Google Scholar