Abstract

Subjects selected on the basis of test anxiety scores made a judgment about landscape photographs during the study phase of a recognition experiment. The orienting tasks required attention to features that involved either deep (geographic location) or shallow (colorfulness) processing. Test performance was better for subjects who had made the deep decision during study. Compared to low-anxiety subjects, the criterion was higher for high-anxiety subjects following deep processing, but it was lower for high-anxiety subjects following shallow processing.

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