Compelled attention: the effects of viewing trauma-related stimuli on concurrent task performance in posttraumatic stress disorder

Abstract

We examined the ability of Vietnam veterans with PTSD to focus attention on a primary digit detection task while concurrently viewing neutral or Vietnam-related picture and word distractors. Controlling for combat exposure, military service, and psychopathology, veterans with PTSD took longer to detect the target when Vietnam-related pictures were distractors. There were no reaction time differences when word stimuli were distractors. The latency effect was specific to trials with trauma-related pictures and did not spread to neutral trials interleaved within a mixed block of trauma and neutral pictures. Individuals with PTSD recalled proportionally more Vietnam-related words than other groups, implying differential attention to Vietnam-related words. Attending to trauma-related pictures interferes with performance of a concurrent task by individuals with PTSD.

Reference: 
Chemtob CM, Roitblat HL, Hamada RS, Muraoka MY, Carlson JG, Bauer GB | 1999
In: Journal of traumatic stress, ISSN 0894-9867 | 12 | 2 | Apr | 309-326
http://link.springer.com/article/10.1023/A:1024728626505
Placement code: 
Yzermans collectie