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Spider phobics more easily see a spider in morphed schematic pictures

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Spider phobics more easily see a spider in morphed schematic pictures. / Kolassa, Stephan.
In: Behavioral and Brain Functions, Vol. 2007, No. 3, 59, 2007.

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Kolassa S. Spider phobics more easily see a spider in morphed schematic pictures. Behavioral and Brain Functions. 2007;2007(3):59. doi: 10.1186/1744-9081-3-59

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Kolassa, Stephan. / Spider phobics more easily see a spider in morphed schematic pictures. In: Behavioral and Brain Functions. 2007 ; Vol. 2007, No. 3.

Bibtex

@article{3aff3f9645d84ede9532e26c10374bf7,
title = "Spider phobics more easily see a spider in morphed schematic pictures",
abstract = "BackgroundIndividuals with social phobia are more likely to misinterpret ambiguous social situations as more threatening, i.e. they show an interpretive bias. This study investigated whether such a bias also exists in specific phobia.MethodsIndividuals with spider phobia or social phobia, spider aficionados and non-phobic controls saw morphed stimuli that gradually transformed from a schematic picture of a flower into a schematic picture of a spider by shifting the outlines of the petals until they turned into spider legs. Participants' task was to decide whether each stimulus was more similar to a spider, a flower or to neither object while EEG was recorded.ResultsAn interpretive bias was found in spider phobia on a behavioral level: with the first opening of the petals of the flower anchor, spider phobics rated the stimuli as more unpleasant and arousing than the control groups and showed an elevated latent trait to classify a stimulus as a spider and a response-time advantage for spider-like stimuli. No cortical correlates on the level of ERPs of this interpretive bias could be identified. However, consistent with previous studies, social and spider phobic persons exhibited generally enhanced visual P1 amplitudes indicative of hypervigilance in phobia.ConclusionResults suggest an interpretive bias and generalization of phobia-specific responses in specific phobia. Similar effects have been observed in other anxiety disorders, such as social phobia and post-traumatic stress disorder.",
author = "Stephan Kolassa",
year = "2007",
doi = "10.1186/1744-9081-3-59",
language = "English",
volume = "2007",
journal = "Behavioral and Brain Functions",
issn = "1744-9081",
publisher = "BioMed Central",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Spider phobics more easily see a spider in morphed schematic pictures

AU - Kolassa, Stephan

PY - 2007

Y1 - 2007

N2 - BackgroundIndividuals with social phobia are more likely to misinterpret ambiguous social situations as more threatening, i.e. they show an interpretive bias. This study investigated whether such a bias also exists in specific phobia.MethodsIndividuals with spider phobia or social phobia, spider aficionados and non-phobic controls saw morphed stimuli that gradually transformed from a schematic picture of a flower into a schematic picture of a spider by shifting the outlines of the petals until they turned into spider legs. Participants' task was to decide whether each stimulus was more similar to a spider, a flower or to neither object while EEG was recorded.ResultsAn interpretive bias was found in spider phobia on a behavioral level: with the first opening of the petals of the flower anchor, spider phobics rated the stimuli as more unpleasant and arousing than the control groups and showed an elevated latent trait to classify a stimulus as a spider and a response-time advantage for spider-like stimuli. No cortical correlates on the level of ERPs of this interpretive bias could be identified. However, consistent with previous studies, social and spider phobic persons exhibited generally enhanced visual P1 amplitudes indicative of hypervigilance in phobia.ConclusionResults suggest an interpretive bias and generalization of phobia-specific responses in specific phobia. Similar effects have been observed in other anxiety disorders, such as social phobia and post-traumatic stress disorder.

AB - BackgroundIndividuals with social phobia are more likely to misinterpret ambiguous social situations as more threatening, i.e. they show an interpretive bias. This study investigated whether such a bias also exists in specific phobia.MethodsIndividuals with spider phobia or social phobia, spider aficionados and non-phobic controls saw morphed stimuli that gradually transformed from a schematic picture of a flower into a schematic picture of a spider by shifting the outlines of the petals until they turned into spider legs. Participants' task was to decide whether each stimulus was more similar to a spider, a flower or to neither object while EEG was recorded.ResultsAn interpretive bias was found in spider phobia on a behavioral level: with the first opening of the petals of the flower anchor, spider phobics rated the stimuli as more unpleasant and arousing than the control groups and showed an elevated latent trait to classify a stimulus as a spider and a response-time advantage for spider-like stimuli. No cortical correlates on the level of ERPs of this interpretive bias could be identified. However, consistent with previous studies, social and spider phobic persons exhibited generally enhanced visual P1 amplitudes indicative of hypervigilance in phobia.ConclusionResults suggest an interpretive bias and generalization of phobia-specific responses in specific phobia. Similar effects have been observed in other anxiety disorders, such as social phobia and post-traumatic stress disorder.

U2 - 10.1186/1744-9081-3-59

DO - 10.1186/1744-9081-3-59

M3 - Journal article

VL - 2007

JO - Behavioral and Brain Functions

JF - Behavioral and Brain Functions

SN - 1744-9081

IS - 3

M1 - 59

ER -