Title of article :
Contamination vs. harm-relevant outcome expectancies and covariation bias in spider phobia
Author/Authors :
Peter J. de Jong، نويسنده , , Madelon L. Peters، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
There is increasing evidence that spiders are not feared because of harmful outcome expectancies but because of disgust and contamination-relevant outcome expectancies. This study investigated the relative strength of contamination- and harm-relevant UCS expectancies and covariation bias in spider phobia. High (n=25) and low (n=24) spider fearful individuals saw a series of slides comprising spiders, pitbulls, maggots, and rabbits. Slides were randomly paired with either a harm-relevant outcome (electrical shock), a contamination-related outcome (drinking of a distasting fluid), or nothing. Spider fearful individuals displayed a contamination-relevant UCS expectancy bias associated with spiders, whereas controls displayed a harm-relevant expectancy bias. There was no evidence for a (differential) postexperimental covariation bias; thus the biased expectancies were not robust against refutation. The present findings add to the evidence that contamination ideation is critically involved in spider phobia.
Keywords :
Covariation bias , Disgust , Phobia , Expectancy bias
Journal title :
Behaviour Research and Therapy
Journal title :
Behaviour Research and Therapy