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Evidence for the DTA hypothesis II: Threatening self-esteem increases death-thought accessibility
Authors:Joseph Hayes  Jeff Schimel  Erik H. Faucher  Todd J. Williams
Affiliation:University of Alberta, Department of Psychology, P-217 Biological Sciences Building, Edmonton, Alta., Canada T6G 2E9
Abstract:Three studies assessed the impact of self-esteem threat on death-thought accessibility (DTA). Increased DTA resulted from three distinct types of self-esteem threat. Studies 1 and 2 employed negative feedback procedures in which participants were told that they scored below average on an intelligence test (Study 1), or that their personality was incongruent for their desired career path (Study 2). In Study 3, participants were led to believe that they would give an ill prepared speech in front of their peers. In Studies 1 and 2 DTA was assessed via reaction times on a lexical decision task, while Study 3 employed a word-fragment completion task. Study 3 demonstrated the DTA buffering effect of fortifying self-esteem via self-affirmation. Discussion focused on general implications for TMT, self-esteem, and mental health.
Keywords:Terror management theory   Self-esteem   Threat   Accessibility   Death
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