Repressors report fewer intrusions following a laboratory stressor: The role of reduced stressor-relevant concept activation and inhibitory functioning

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Abstract

This study investigated whether a repressive coping style is associated with fewer intrusions following an experimentally controlled stressor. Furthermore, we examined whether lower activation of stressor-relevant concepts in long-term memory and better inhibitory functioning may contribute to this association. Extreme-scoring participants on a trait anxiety and a social desirability scale were selected to form repressor (n=35), low anxious (n=15), high anxious (n=30), and defensive (n=21) groups. In line with predictions, repressors reported fewer intrusions following a failure manipulation compared to non-repressors. Furthermore, pre-stressor inhibitory functioning was negatively associated with color-naming interference of stressor-related words. This suggests that overall, higher inhibitory control is related to lower activation of failure-related concepts. However, there was no evidence that concept activation and inhibitory control were responsible for repressors' lower number of self-reported intrusions.

Original languageEnglish
Article number904500414
Pages (from-to)189-200
Number of pages12
JournalAnxiety Stress and Coping
Volume22
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2009

Keywords

  • repressive coping
  • intrusions
  • inhibitory control
  • WORKING-MEMORY CAPACITY
  • SELF-DECEPTIVE STRATEGIES
  • COPING STYLE
  • STROOP
  • SUPPRESSION
  • ALLOCATION
  • THOUGHTS
  • AVOIDANCE
  • RETRIEVAL
  • ATTENTION

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