G. Matthews et Sj. Westerman, ENERGY AND TENSION AS PREDICTORS OF CONTROLLED VISUAL AND MEMORY-SEARCH, Personality and individual differences, 17(5), 1994, pp. 617-626
Fifty subjects performed controlled visual and memory search tasks. Ta
sk demands (single vs dual) and priority of dual-task components were
manipulated. Individual differences in two dimensions of self-report a
rousal, energy and tension, were assessed prior to performance. Two pr
incipal results were obtained. First, high energy facilitated dual- bu
t not single-task memory search efficiency. Second, energy and tension
interactively affected both types of search: subjects high in energy
and low in tension performed particularly well. High energy and lower
tension tended to be associated with lower ratings of workload on the
tasks. Results suggest modifications to existing theories of individua
l differences in attentional resource availability. Energy may be pote
ntially facilitative to both attentional and short-term memory tasks,
but high tension appears to block the beneficial effect of energy.