• Title of article

    Unconscious processes, subliminal stimulation, and anxiety

  • Author/Authors

    Birgit Mayer، نويسنده , , Harald Merckelbach، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
  • Pages
    20
  • From page
    571
  • To page
    590
  • Abstract
    Ever since Poetzl’s studies, subliminal stimulation has been used as a paradigm to explore the connection between unconscious processes and psychopathology. Inspired by the psychodynamic tradition, folk psychology attributes a dramatic power to subliminal stimulation. In contrast, most modern researchers argue that effects of subliminal stimulation are rather limited. Does that mean that the unconscious is irrelevant to psychopathology? Not necessarily. Öhman and Soares’ hypothesis about the preattentive origins of phobic reactions represents a good example of a model in which a “quick and dirty” unconscious may produce pathogenic effects. Although the empirical basis of this model is still meagre, its attractiveness hinges on the assumption that “quick and dirty” processes that make up the first second of human information processing are essential for higher level analysis and performance. In line with this, recent studies have indicated that the attentional bias that accompanies pathological anxiety, might be an unconscious phenomenon. Theories that focus on unconscious cognitive processes involved in pathological anxiety are certainly interesting, but it should be emphasized that there are other aspects of automaticity (i.e., involuntariness) that may be as relevant to psychopathology as absence of awareness.
  • Keywords
    Anxiety , ego development , perceptive threshold
  • Journal title
    Clinical Psychology Review
  • Serial Year
    1999
  • Journal title
    Clinical Psychology Review
  • Record number

    483531