Skip to Main Content
Boston University Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine
Search

  • Admissions
  • Education
  • Research
  • Emergency & Reporting
Search
  • Current Students
  • Faculty
  • Staff
  • Alumni
  • Parents
  • Donors
  • About
    • Frontline Medicine
    • By The Numbers
    • Strategic Plan
    • Organizational Chart
    • BUMC HR Resources
    • History
    • Clinical Affiliations
    • Basic Science & Clinical Departments
    • Faculty Directory
    • Alumni Medical Library
  • Education
    • PhD Education
    • MD Education
    • Master’s Degree Education
    • Dual Degree Programs & Certificates
    • Center for Continuing Education
  • Admissions
    • Why Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine?
    • Apply for MD Program
    • Apply for MD Program
    • Apply for PhD Program
    • Apply for Master’s Program
  • Student Affairs
    • MD Student Affairs
    • GMS Student Affairs Resources
  • Research
    • Cores, Facilities & Services
    • Find Funding
    • Centers & Institutes
    • Human Subject Research
    • Resources
  • Giving
    • Why Give?
    • Who Gives?
    • What Can I Give?
    • Where Can I Give?
    • What Can I Attend?
    • How Can I Give?
    • Contact the Development Office
    • Parents Community
    • Donor Resources
  • Offices & Services
    • Office of the Dean
    • Faculty Affairs Office
    • MD Program Offices
    • Master’s & PhD Program Offices
    • Alumni Office
    • Development Office
    • Diversity & Inclusion
    • Communications Office
    • Events Office
  • News & Events
    • News Archive
    • Calendar

Frontline Medicine & Science

  • GraduationMD/PhD Convocation Celebrates the Achievements of the Class of ’25
  • GraduationGraduate Medical Sciences Students Celebrated at May 15 Convocation
  • CTENIH Awards $15M Grant to Diagnose CTE During Life
View News & Events

Magazine

Winter Spring 2025Boston University Medicine

Negative Distractions Disrupt Ongoing Task Performance

grayscale image of man holding a flower

Photo by Teena Lalawat on Unsplash.

Research

Negative Distractions Disrupt Ongoing Task Performance

April 17, 2025
Twitter Facebook

The world is full of distractions, like intrusive memories, worries about the future and reminders of things to do.

Sustained attention, the ability to maintain focus on a specific stimulus or task for an extended period without significant lapses in concentration, is a foundational cognitive process that underlies many other cognitive functions, impacts daily functioning and is commonly impaired across a diverse population. While upsetting thoughts and experiences can disrupt one’s ability to focus attention while performing everyday tasks, translating this phenomenon to the laboratory has remained elusive.

In a new study, researchers from Boston University Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine and VA Boston Healthcare System have shown that when people are sustaining attention, distractions that are upsetting or unpleasant are most likely to disrupt that focus. The researchers hope these findings will assist in treating anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorders.

Head and shoulders of Michael Esterman eyeglasses, smiling broadly
Michael Esterman, PhD

“We found that negative distractions disrupted ongoing task performance as well as impacted  the participants’ mood by making them feel worse,” explained corresponding author Michael Esterman, PhD, principal investigator in the VA’s National Center for PTSD and BU associate professor of psychiatry.

Two groups of approximately 60 participants performed a series of tasks (called the gradCPT) requiring them to sustain their visual attention for about 10 minutes without a break, while photos of distractions would sometimes fade in and out in the background on a video monitor. These visual distractions could be upsetting (a crying baby), neutral (a chair), or positive (a smiling baby).

Participants are asked to press a button to each digit except when the digit is “3” and to ignore the background distractors.

The researchers found that when the backgrounds were upsetting, participants were both slower and less accurate at the sustained attention task. After the task was completed, participants were tested for their memory of the background distractor, even though they were told to ignore these distractors. They found the upsetting distractors were remembered better than those that were neutral or positive.

“We believe this study will help scientists measure how distractible a person is, what is most distracting to them, and whether those distractions intrude in their memories. We also believe it can open new opportunities to study attention in clinical populations and their neural mechanism alongside brain imaging, both of which are directions we are currently pursuing.”

These findings appear online in the journal Behavior Research Methods.

  • Share this story

Share

Negative Distractions Disrupt Ongoing Task Performance

72 East Concord St.
Boston, MA 02118
Contact & Directions
Boston University Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Youtube

We are Frontline Medicine & Science.

Every day, we learn, conduct research, care, teach, discover, and pioneer in places not everyone goes: the classrooms at the frontline of medicine & science.

  • Medical Campus
  • Search
  • Directory
  • Contact
Boston University
  • © 2025 Trustees of Boston University
  • Privacy Statement
  • Accessibility
  • DMCA
© 2025 Boston University. All rights reserved. www.bu.edu
Boston University Masterplate