The relationship between worry and academic performance: examining the moderating role of attention control.

Anxiety Stress Coping

School of Population Health, Discipline of Psychology, Curtin University, Perth', Australia.

Published: November 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • This study explored how attention control affects the link between worry and academic performance in undergraduates during stressful situations.
  • Results showed that under acute worry, low attention control led to a stronger negative impact of worry on academic performance, while high attention control weakened this effect.
  • The findings suggest that measuring attention control during periods of worry provides a better indicator of how worry influences academic success than measuring it at rest.

Article Abstract

Background: Worry is frequently associated with reduced cognitive performance, through consumption of attention control resources. Assessing attention control during acute worry may better reflect cognitive performance in real-world scenarios. This study examined whether attention control (assessed at rest and under acute worry) moderates the relationship between worry and academic performance.

Methods: Worry (Penn State Worry Questionnaire) and academic performance (examination grades) were assessed in 87 undergraduates, with attention control (antisaccade performance) measured at baseline and following worry induction.

Results: When assessed at rest, attention control did not moderate the relationship between trait worry and academic performance. However, under acute worry, attention control significantly moderated the relationship between worry and academic performance (= .05, = 0.14), such that at low levels of attention control under worry, higher trait worry was significantly associated with lower academic performance. At high levels of attention control under worry, however, the relationship between trait worry and academic performance was not significant.

Conclusions: Findings suggest that worry may shape performance according to attention control levels, with attention control's moderating role being more pronounced under conditions of acute worry. These results provide preliminary evidence that attention control assessed under worry may better predict real-world performance, compared to assessment at rest.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10615806.2024.2308673DOI Listing

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