Blood-injection-injury fears: Harm- vs. disgust-relevant selective outcome associations

被引:18
|
作者
de Jong, Peter J.
Peters, Madelon L.
机构
[1] Univ Groningen, Dept Dev & Clin Psychol, NL-9712 TS Groningen, Netherlands
[2] Maastricht Univ, Dept Med Clin & Expt Psychol, Maastricht, Netherlands
关键词
covariation bias; expectancy bias; blood-injection-injury phobia; disgust; disgust sensitivity;
D O I
10.1016/j.jbtep.2006.09.001
中图分类号
B849 [应用心理学];
学科分类号
040203 ;
摘要
There is increasing evidence that blood-injection-injury (1311) phobia is qualitatively different from the other specific phobias in the sense that phobic distress takes the form of disgust rather than (threat-induced) fear. Following this, we tested the relative importance of harm and disgust-related associative biases in BII-fear. High (n = 25) and low (n = 27) fearful individuals saw a series of fear-relevant (blood-related) and fear-irrelevant (rabbit and flower) slides which were randomly paired with either a harm-related outcome, a disgust-related outcome, or nothing. Preexperimentally, participants expected blood-related slides to be followed by both disgust- and harm-relevant outcomes. These selective preexperimental outcome expectancies were readily corrected during the experiment. Neither low nor high fearful participants showed a postexperimental covariation bias. The absence of differential effects between high and low fearful participants does not support the idea that disgust- or harm-relevant associative biases play a role in the maintenance of BII-fears. The results corroborate the previous finding of Pury and Mineka [1997. Covariation bias for blood-injury stimuli and aversive outcomes. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 35, 35-47] that people are generally liable to selectively associate BII-stimuli with aversive outcomes. (c) 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
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页码:263 / 274
页数:12
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