Benefits of distraction

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Johannes von Gehlen
Pierre Sachse
Cite this article:  von Gehlen, J., & Sachse, P. (2015). Benefits of distraction. Social Behavior and Personality: An international journal, 43(4), 601-612.


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A considerable amount of research has been carried out with the aim of understanding the relationship between arousal and performance, but so far this topic has rarely been examined in the context of personality. In this study, we used a 2-group design (N = 76) to investigate the effects of arousal, induced by cognitive activation, on introverts and extroverts in the context of follow-up tasks. Arousal was induced by an irrelevant auditory stimulus that implemented a high cognitive load while participants were attempting to remember the content of the text of an article. Extroverts showed a greater improvement in performance than did introverts in a consecutive task, a d2-Test of Attention, leading to the conclusion that extroverts benefit more from cognitive activation through external stimuli than do introverts. Theoretical implications are discussed in the framework of the Yerkes–Dodson law.

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