And along came a spider: An attentional bias for the detection of spiders in young children and adults |
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Authors: | Vanessa LoBue |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychology, Rutgers University, 101 Warren Street, Newark, NJ 07102, USA |
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Abstract: | Spiders are among the most common targets of fears and phobias in the world. In visual search tasks, adults detect their presence more rapidly than other kinds of stimuli. Reported here is an investigation of whether young children share this attentional bias for the detection of spiders. In a series of experiments, preschoolers and adults were asked to find the single spider picture among an array of eight mushrooms or cockroaches or the reverse. Both children and adults detected the presence of spiders more rapidly than both categories of distracter stimuli. Furthermore, there was no difference between the detection of two neutral stimuli (cockroaches vs. mushrooms). These results provide the first evidence of enhanced visual detection of spiders in young children. |
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Keywords: | Threat perception Attentional bias Detection Spiders Visual attention |
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