• Title of article

    UCS expectancy biases in spider phobics: underestimation of aversive consequences following fear-irrelevant stimuli

  • Author/Authors

    Kate Cavanagh، نويسنده , , Graham C. L. Davey، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
  • Pages
    11
  • From page
    641
  • To page
    651
  • Abstract
    This paper reports the results of two studies investigating judgements made by spider phobics about the potential threatening consequences (unconditioned stimulus, UCS, expectancies) associated with their phobic stimulus, fear-relevant (FR) stimuli, and fear-irrelevant (FI) stimuli. Using a ‘thought experiment’ UCS expectancy paradigm, the studies reported found that (1) spider phobics reported significantly higher UCS expectancies to spider stimuli than nonphobics, (2) spider phobics consistently underestimated the probability of aversive consequences following FI stimuli and (3) this underestimation of UCS expectancies to FI stimuli in phobics was not the result of a contrast effect resulting from sequential FR and FI judgements. This differential effect may have important implications for the kind of mechanism which mediates judgements about phobic consequences. These findings suggest that the dimensions on which phobic stimuli are categorised may be ‘stretched’ in the case of phobics and that this gives rise to the comparative underestimation of threat associated with FI stimuli but also makes phobics more vulnerable to acquiring other phobias.
  • Keywords
    Spider phobia , UCS expectancy , Fear-irrelevant stimuli
  • Journal title
    Behaviour Research and Therapy
  • Serial Year
    2000
  • Journal title
    Behaviour Research and Therapy
  • Record number

    569258