Submission 607
Interrupting with Bad News: Effects of Emotional Interruptions on Resumption of a Serial, Multistep Task
SymposiumTalk-02
Presented by: Tara Radovic
Resuming a serial, multistep task after an interruption requires maintaining the relevant task goals during the delay and retrieving them afterward. While current theories of interruptions do not consider the role of emotions in these goal maintenance and retrieval processes, prior work in the working memory domain suggests that affective content can impair the maintenance of memory items, whereas memory for item order remains unaffected. The present study tested whether this pattern of an affective influence also applies to goal retrieval following interruptions. Participants completed an affectively neutral, multistep primary task and were occasionally interrupted between steps. Interruptions consisted of either semantic categorization tasks (judging whether a displayed picture showed a human or an animal) or recognition tasks (judging whether a picture was old or new). The interruptions varied in length (short vs. long) and affective valence (negative vs. neutral), and the affective content was irrelevant to the task. After each interruption, participants were required to resume the primary task at the correct step. Resumption performance was assessed using response times and sequence errors, defined as deviations from the correct step order (e.g., skipping or repeating steps). Preliminary results indicate longer resumption times following affectively negative interruptions than neutral ones, particularly when the interruptions were long. In contrast, affective valence did not influence the number of sequence errors. The findings align with the hypothesis that affective stimuli require additional attentional resources, leaving fewer working memory resources available for maintaining task goals, and thereby slowing goal retrieval during the task resumption.