Abstract

Goal-directed control guides optimal decision-making and it is an important cognitive faculty that protects against developing habits. Previous studies have found some evidence of goal-directed deficits when healthy individuals are stressed, and in psychiatric conditions characterised by compulsive behaviours and anxiety. Here, we tested if goal-directed control is affected by state anxiety, which might explain the former results. We carried out a causal test of this hypothesis in two experiments (between-subject N = 88; within-subject N = 50) that used the inhalation of hypercapnic gas (7.5% CO2) to induce an acute state of anxiety in healthy volunteers. In a third experiment (N = 1413), we used a correlational design to test if real-life anxiety-provoking events (panic attacks, stressful events) are associated with impaired goal-directed control. In the former two causal experiments, we induced a profoundly anxious state, both physiologically and psychologically, but this did not affect goal-directed performance. In the third, correlational, study, we found no evidence for an association between goal-directed control, panic attacks or stressful life eventsover and above variance accounted for by trait differences in compulsivity. In sum, three complementary experiments found no evidence that anxiety impairs goal-directed control in human subjects.

Highlights

  • Goal-directed control guides optimal decision-making and it is an important cognitive faculty that protects against developing habits

  • Though no previous study has examined whether experimentally induced state anxiety impairs goal-directed planning, a related literature on stress-induction offers a basis for this suggestion

  • Psychological and physiological measures confirmed that anxiety induction was successful and of a magnitude similar to that observed in prior studies (Cooper et al, 2013; Garner, Attwood, Baldwin, & Munafò, 2012; Garner, Attwood, Baldwin, James, & Munafò, 2011): participants in the CO2 condition experienced greater self-reported anxiety (F(1.97, 159.61) = 35.57, p < 0.001) and had a higher heart rate (F(1.96, 152.92) = 36.64, p < 0.001) than those assigned to the air condition (Fig. 1b and d; online Supplementary materials)

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Summary

Introduction

Goal-directed control guides optimal decision-making and it is an important cognitive faculty that protects against developing habits. Previous studies have found some evidence of goal-directed deficits when healthy individuals are stressed, and in psychiatric conditions characterised by compulsive behaviours and anxiety. In a third experiment (N = 1413), we used a correlational design to test if real-life anxiety-provoking events (panic attacks, stressful events) are associated with impaired goal-directed control. In the former two causal experiments, we induced a profoundly anxious state, both physiologically and psychologically, but this did not affect goal-directed performance. Acute stress has been shown to induce deficits in goal-directed planning (Park, Lee, & Chey, 2017; Schwabe & Wolf, 2009, 2010), albeit inconsistently (null results: Heller, Ezie, Otto, & Timpano, 2018; Otto, Raio, Chiang, Phelps, & Daw, 2013; Radenbach et al 2015) in healthy individuals. Acute anxiety and stress manipulations produce similar cardiovascular changes, and induce negative affect, but anxiety induction differs from stress in terms of the specific psychological experience (e.g. increased vigilance, panic, fear) and other aspects of the physiological response (Bailey, Argyropoulos, Kendrick, & Nutt, 2005; Shin & Liberzon, 2010)

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