Title of article
Is defensiveness associated with cognitive bias away from emotional information?
Author/Authors
Billy Jansson، نويسنده , , Lars-Gunnar Lundh، نويسنده , , Christian Oldenburg، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages
10
From page
1373
To page
1382
Abstract
The role of defensiveness and repressive coping style for the performance on a combined emotional Stroop and tachistoscopic identification task with masked and unmasked words was studied in a community sample. Defensiveness was associated with a decrease in Stroop interference for masked threat words, but not for unmasked threat words. The most robust results, however, were found with regard to overall test performance (independent of emotional valence). On the emotional Stroop task, high-defensive men (but not women) were faster to colour-name words in general, irrespective of emotional valence. On the tachistoscopic identification task, high-defensive women identified fewer words in general than low-defensive participants. The results are discussed in terms of defensiveness being associated with (a) avoidance of emotional information at an automatic, pre-attentive level, and (b) a general avoidance of potentially emotional information that takes different form in men and women depending on possible differences in what is seen as socially desirable for the two genders.
Keywords
attention , Defensiveness , Cognitive bias , Repressive coping style
Journal title
Personality and Individual Differences
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
Personality and Individual Differences
Record number
457833
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