Author:
Charpentier Caroline J.,Cogliati Dezza Irene,Vellani Valentina,Globig Laura K.,Gädeke Maria,Sharot Tali
Abstract
AbstractSeeking information when anxious may help reduce the aversive feeling of uncertainty and guide decision-making. If information is negative or confusing, however, this may increase anxiety further. Information gathered under anxiety can thus be beneficial and/or damaging. Here, we examine whether anxiety leads to a general increase in information-seeking, or rather to changes in the type of information and/or situations in which it is sought. In two controlled laboratory studies, we show that both trait anxiety and induced anxiety lead to a selective alteration in information-seeking. In particular, anxiety did not enhance the general tendency to seek information, nor did it alter the valence of the information gathered. Rather, anxiety amplified the tendency to seek information more in response to large changes in the environment. This was true even when the cause of the anxiety was not directly related to the information sought. As anxious individuals have been shown to have problems learning in changing environments, greater information-seeking in such environments may be an adaptive compensatory mechanism.
Funder
Sir Henry Postdoctoral Fellowship
FWO postdoctoral fellowship
Wellcome Trust Senior Research Fellowship
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
22 articles.
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