The Influence of Posture on Attention

Exp Psychol. 2022 Nov;69(6):295-307. doi: 10.1027/1618-3169/a000567.

Abstract

Smith et al. (2019) found standing resulted in better performance than sitting in three different cognitive control paradigms: a Stroop task, a task-switching, and a visual search paradigm. Here, we conducted close replications of the authors' three experiments using larger sample sizes than the original work. Our sample sizes had essentially perfect power to detect the key postural effects reported by Smith et al. The results from our experiments revealed that, in contrast to Smith et al., the postural interactions were quite limited in magnitude in addition to being only a fraction of the size of the original effects. Moreover, our results from Experiment 1 are consistent with two recent replications (Caron et al., 2020; Straub et al., 2022), which reported no meaningful influences of posture on the Stroop effect. In all, the current research provides further converging evidence that postural influences on cognition do not appear to be as robust, as was initially reported in prior work.

Keywords: attention; cognitive control; embodiment; posture; standing.

MeSH terms

  • Attention
  • Cognition*
  • Humans
  • Posture
  • Psychomotor Performance*
  • Stroop Test

Grants and funding

Funding: This work was supported by the US Army Combat Capabilities Development Command for (Derek Harter and Shulan Lu) under Cooperative Agreement No. W911NF2120153. While working on this manuscript, Emilie E. Caron was supported by a Postgraduate Scholarship-Doctoral from Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (PGSD3 - 547511 - 2020) and a provincial award from the Fonds de recherche du Québec - Nature et technologies (#305883) to conduct this research. Finally, this research was also supported by two Discovery Grants (RGPIN-2019-04071 and RGPIN-2016-06749) from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada to Dr. Daniel Smilek and Dr. Jonathan Carriere, respectively.