Title of article
Mortality salience reduces attentional bias for fear-relevant animals
Author/Authors
Geoff MacDonald and Ottmar V. Lipp، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
8
From page
243
To page
250
Abstract
This research investigated the influence of
reminders of mortality on biased attention for fear-relevant
animals across 2 studies. In each study, participants completed
a baseline dot-probe test of attention to fear-relevant
animals (snakes and spiders). After random assignment,
participants completed a mortality salience or control
writing task (about watching television in Study 1 and about
writing an important exam in Study 2). Finally, participants
completed the dot-probe measure a second time. In both
studies, those in the mortality salience condition showed a
significant reduction in bias for fear-relevant animals from
baseline to post-manipulation, whereas no change was
found for those in the control conditions. These data suggest
that the previously demonstrated lack of emotional response
to mortality salience may, in part, result from the avoidance
of fear-relevant stimuli.
Keywords
Terror management Attention Anxiety Fear Threat
Journal title
MOTIVATION AND EMOTION
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
MOTIVATION AND EMOTION
Record number
711626
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