An experimental test of stimulus estimation theory, danger and safety with snake phobic stimuli

The stimulus estimation model (Taylor and Rachman, 1994) asserts that fear overprediction stems from: (a) overprediction of the danger elements of a phobic stimulus, and (b) underprediction of existing safety resources. Using a 2 x 2 factorial design, with danger (high vs. low) and safety (high vs....

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wright, Lisa Marie
Language:en_US
Published: 2007
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/2250
id ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-MWU.1993-2250
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-MWU.1993-22502014-03-29T03:42:06Z An experimental test of stimulus estimation theory, danger and safety with snake phobic stimuli Wright, Lisa Marie The stimulus estimation model (Taylor and Rachman, 1994) asserts that fear overprediction stems from: (a) overprediction of the danger elements of a phobic stimulus, and (b) underprediction of existing safety resources. Using a 2 x 2 factorial design, with danger (high vs. low) and safety (high vs. low) as between-subjects variables, an experimental test of the model was conducted with 25 snake-fearful participants per condition. The four experimental conditions were matched on initial levels of snake fearfulness, as assessed by the Snake Questionnaire (SNAQ). For the 51 participants who demonstrated overprediction of fear, high danger led to reliably more fear overprediction than low danger; and low safety led to reliably more fear overprediction than high safety. The interaction between danger and safety was not statistically significant. The results offer the first convincing experimental support for the stimulus estimation model of fear overprediction. 2007-06-01T19:18:32Z 2007-06-01T19:18:32Z 2000-01-01T00:00:00Z http://hdl.handle.net/1993/2250 en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
description The stimulus estimation model (Taylor and Rachman, 1994) asserts that fear overprediction stems from: (a) overprediction of the danger elements of a phobic stimulus, and (b) underprediction of existing safety resources. Using a 2 x 2 factorial design, with danger (high vs. low) and safety (high vs. low) as between-subjects variables, an experimental test of the model was conducted with 25 snake-fearful participants per condition. The four experimental conditions were matched on initial levels of snake fearfulness, as assessed by the Snake Questionnaire (SNAQ). For the 51 participants who demonstrated overprediction of fear, high danger led to reliably more fear overprediction than low danger; and low safety led to reliably more fear overprediction than high safety. The interaction between danger and safety was not statistically significant. The results offer the first convincing experimental support for the stimulus estimation model of fear overprediction.
author Wright, Lisa Marie
spellingShingle Wright, Lisa Marie
An experimental test of stimulus estimation theory, danger and safety with snake phobic stimuli
author_facet Wright, Lisa Marie
author_sort Wright, Lisa Marie
title An experimental test of stimulus estimation theory, danger and safety with snake phobic stimuli
title_short An experimental test of stimulus estimation theory, danger and safety with snake phobic stimuli
title_full An experimental test of stimulus estimation theory, danger and safety with snake phobic stimuli
title_fullStr An experimental test of stimulus estimation theory, danger and safety with snake phobic stimuli
title_full_unstemmed An experimental test of stimulus estimation theory, danger and safety with snake phobic stimuli
title_sort experimental test of stimulus estimation theory, danger and safety with snake phobic stimuli
publishDate 2007
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/2250
work_keys_str_mv AT wrightlisamarie anexperimentaltestofstimulusestimationtheorydangerandsafetywithsnakephobicstimuli
AT wrightlisamarie experimentaltestofstimulusestimationtheorydangerandsafetywithsnakephobicstimuli
_version_ 1716657674621288448