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What you cannot see can help you: the effect of exposure to unreportable stimuli on approach behavior
Authors:Weinberger Joel  Siegel Paul  Siefert Caleb  Drwal Julie
Affiliation:a Derner Institute, Adelphi University, Box 701, Garden City, NY 11530, United States;b Purchase College, State University of New York, 735 Anderson Hill Road, Purchase, NY 10577-1400, United States;c University of Michigan – Dearborn, Psychology Department, CASL Building, 4th floor, RM 4068, 4901 Evergreen Rd., Dearborn, MI 48128, United States
Abstract:
We examined effects of exposure to unreportable images of spiders on approach towards a tarantula. Pretests revealed awareness of the stimuli was at chance. Participants high or low (top and bottom 15%) on fear of spiders were randomly assigned to receive computer-generated exposure to unreportable pictures of spiders or outdoor scenes. They then engaged in a Behavioral Approach Task (BAT) with a live tarantula. Non-fearful participants completed more BAT items than spider-fearful individuals. Additionally, as predicted, a significant interaction (F(1,48)=5.12, p<.03) between fear of spiders and stimulus demonstrated that spider-fearful participants exposed to spiders completed more BAT items than spider-fearful participants exposed to control stimuli (but not as many as non-fearful participants). The findings support the hypothesis that exposure to unreportable feared stimuli promotes approach towards the feared object. Future research and clinical implications were discussed.
Keywords:Exposure   Exposure treatment   Unreportable   Phobia   Phobia treatment
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