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263Anxiety and Performance: The Processing Efficiency TheoryCognition and Emotion 6 (6): 409-434. 1992.
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59Attention and Performance Limitations Michael W. Eysenck and Mark T. KeaneIn Daniel Levitin (ed.), Foundations of Cognitive Psychology: Core Readings, Mit Press. pp. 363. 2002.
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49Anxiety and depression: toward overlapping and distinctive featuresCognition and Emotion 32 (7): 1391-1400. 2017.
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39Introduction to the special issue: Emotional states, attention, and working memoryCognition and Emotion 24 (2): 189-199. 2010.No abstract
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37Trait anxiety, visuospatial processing, and working memoryCognition and Emotion 19 (8): 1214-1228. 2005.
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34Implicit memory bias, explicit memory bias, and anxietyCognition and Emotion 8 (5): 415-431. 1994.
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33Anxiety and depression: Past, present, and future eventsCognition and Emotion 20 (2): 274-294. 2006.
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32Attentional bias to threat in clinical anxiety statesCognition and Emotion 6 (2): 149-159. 1992.
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30Emotional information processing in repressors: The vigilance–avoidance theoryCognition and Emotion 21 (8): 1585-1614. 2007.No abstract
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29Assessment of cognitive bias in anxiety and depression using a colour perception taskCognition and Emotion 5 (3): 221-238. 1991.
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29Interpretation Bias in Test Anxiety: The Time Course of Predictive InferencesCognition and Emotion 11 (1): 43-64. 1997.
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27Effects of monetary incentives on rehearsal and on cued recallBulletin of the Psychonomic Society 15 (4): 245-247. 1980.
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19Early vigilance and late avoidance of threat processing: Repressive coping versus low/high anxietyCognition and Emotion 14 (6): 763-787. 2000.
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19When the bogus pipeline interferes with self-deceptive strategies: Effects on state anxiety in repressorsCognition and Emotion 19 (1): 83-100. 2005.
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15Ego-threat interpretive bias in test anxiety: On-line inferencesCognition and Emotion 8 (2): 127-146. 1994.
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15Personality and Cognitive PerformancePolish Psychological Bulletin 39 (4): 178-191. 2008.Personality and Cognitive Performance The two experiments reported here are concerned with the influence of trait anxiety and other individual differences on cognitive performance using the face-in-the-crowd procedure. Participants completed questionnaires and across two experiments searched for discrepant faces in matrices of otherwise identical faces. The key findings from this study indicated that anxiety enhanced processing efficiency of positive emotional material when interacts with high p…Read more
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14Effects of introversion-extraversion on continuous recognition memoryBulletin of the Psychonomic Society 15 (4): 233-235. 1980.
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9A neurocognitive account of attentional control theory: how does trait anxiety affect the brain’s attentional networks?Cognition and Emotion 37 (2): 220-237. 2023.Attentional control theory (ACT) was proposed to account for trait anxiety’s effects on cognitive performance. According to ACT, impaired processing efficiency in high anxiety is mediated through inefficient executive processes that are needed for effective attentional control. Here we review the central assumptions and predictions of ACT within the context of more recent empirical evidence from neuroimaging studies. We then attempt to provide an account of ACT within a framework of the relevant…Read more
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3Cirillo, L., Kaplan, B. and Wapner, S.(Eds)(1989). Emotions in ideal human developCognition and Emotion 1 80. 1991.
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1Ai Vs. HumansRoutledge. 2021.The great majority of books on artificial intelligence are written by AI experts who understandably focus on its achievements and potential transformative effects on society. In contrast, AI vs. Humans is written by two psychologists whose perspective on AI is based on their knowledge and understanding of human cognition.
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Royal Holloway University of LondonResearcher
Egham, Surrey, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland