Stress and cognition: A user’s guide to designing and interpreting studies
•Guidelines for studies examining the effects of stress on cognition are provided.•Following these guidelines will maximize the interpretability of obtained results.•Understanding these guidelines will help readers to interpret prior studies of stress and cognition. Fueling the rapid growth in our u...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Psychoneuroendocrinology 2020-02, Vol.112, p.104475-104475, Article 104475 |
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description | •Guidelines for studies examining the effects of stress on cognition are provided.•Following these guidelines will maximize the interpretability of obtained results.•Understanding these guidelines will help readers to interpret prior studies of stress and cognition.
Fueling the rapid growth in our understanding of how stress influences cognition, the number of studies examining the effects of stress on various cognitive processes has grown substantially over the last two decades. Despite this growth, few published guidelines exist for designing these studies, and divergent paradigm designs can diminish typical effects of stress or even reverse them. The goal of this review, therefore, is to survey necessary considerations (e.g., validating a stress induction), important considerations (e.g., specifying the timing of the stressor and cognitive task), and best practices (e.g., using Bayesian analyses) when designing a study that aims at least in part to examine the effects of acute stress on some cognitive process or function. These guidelines will also serve to help readers of these studies interpret what may otherwise be very confusing, anomalous results. Designing and interpreting studies with these considerations and practices in mind will help to move the field of stress and cognition forward by clarifying how, exactly, stress influences performance on a given cognitive task in a population of interest. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1016/j.psyneuen.2019.104475 |
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Fueling the rapid growth in our understanding of how stress influences cognition, the number of studies examining the effects of stress on various cognitive processes has grown substantially over the last two decades. Despite this growth, few published guidelines exist for designing these studies, and divergent paradigm designs can diminish typical effects of stress or even reverse them. The goal of this review, therefore, is to survey necessary considerations (e.g., validating a stress induction), important considerations (e.g., specifying the timing of the stressor and cognitive task), and best practices (e.g., using Bayesian analyses) when designing a study that aims at least in part to examine the effects of acute stress on some cognitive process or function. These guidelines will also serve to help readers of these studies interpret what may otherwise be very confusing, anomalous results. 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Fueling the rapid growth in our understanding of how stress influences cognition, the number of studies examining the effects of stress on various cognitive processes has grown substantially over the last two decades. Despite this growth, few published guidelines exist for designing these studies, and divergent paradigm designs can diminish typical effects of stress or even reverse them. The goal of this review, therefore, is to survey necessary considerations (e.g., validating a stress induction), important considerations (e.g., specifying the timing of the stressor and cognitive task), and best practices (e.g., using Bayesian analyses) when designing a study that aims at least in part to examine the effects of acute stress on some cognitive process or function. These guidelines will also serve to help readers of these studies interpret what may otherwise be very confusing, anomalous results. Designing and interpreting studies with these considerations and practices in mind will help to move the field of stress and cognition forward by clarifying how, exactly, stress influences performance on a given cognitive task in a population of interest.</abstract><cop>England</cop><pub>Elsevier Ltd</pub><pmid>31810538</pmid><doi>10.1016/j.psyneuen.2019.104475</doi><tpages>1</tpages></addata></record> |
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subjects | Best practices Cognition Cognitive Dysfunction - diagnosis Cognitive Dysfunction - etiology Cognitive Dysfunction - physiopathology Guidelines as Topic - standards Humans Psychophysiology - methods Psychophysiology - standards Research Design - standards Stress Stress, Psychological - complications Stress, Psychological - diagnosis Stress, Psychological - physiopathology Study design |
title | Stress and cognition: A user’s guide to designing and interpreting studies |
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