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Anxiety and Performance: The Processing Efficiency Theory
2.3K
Citations
48
References
1992
Year
"Anxiety impairs processing efficiency more than effectiveness." Good. Other: Sentence: "[Other] Some theorists (e.g." incomplete. The content is incomplete but maybe just "Some theorists (e.g." not useful. The instruction: If Other only contains publisher copyright lines or similar non-essential boilerplate, compress into short sentence.
Abstract Anxiety often impairs performance of "difficult" tasks (especially under test conditions), but there are numerous exceptions. Theories of anxiety and performance need to address at least two major issues: (1) the complexity and apparent inconsistency of the findings; and (2) the conceptual definition of task difficulty. Some theorists (e.g. Humphreys & Revelle, 1984; Sarason, 1988) argue that anxiety causes worry, and worry always impairs performance on tasks with high attentional or short-term memory demands. According to the processing efficiency theory, worry has two main effects: (1) a reduction in the storage and processing capacity of the working memory system available for a concurrent task; and (2) an increment in on-task effort and activities designed to improve performance. There is a crucial distinction within the theory between performance effectiveness (= quality of performance) and processing efficiency (= performance effectiveness divided by effort). Anxiety characteristically impairs efficiency more than effectiveness.
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