Attention and memory biases for aggressive information in college students with fragile high self-esteem |
| |
Authors: | Jiaxing Dai Heming Gao Lihua Zhang Hong Chen |
| |
Affiliation: | College of Psychology, Liaoning Normal University, Dalian, China |
| |
Abstract: | In this study, we examined attention and memory biases for aggressive information in two groups of college students. Individuals with fragile high self-esteem (n = 30) and individuals with secure high self-esteem (n = 30) first performed a dot-probe task investigating attention bias, followed by a memory task. Incidental free recall of words presented in the memory task was then completed to assess memory bias. Results revealed that individuals with fragile high self-esteem exhibited significant attention and memory biases for aggressive words compared with secure high self-esteem individuals. Attention bias for aggressive words was positively correlated with memory bias in individuals with fragile high self-esteem, but no correlation was found for individuals with secure high self-esteem. These findings suggest that individuals with fragile high self-esteem selectively attend to and remember aggression-related information. They may process information in ways that are congruent with an aggression-related schema. This study reveals the aggressive cognitive processes of individuals with fragile high self-esteem, which may be related to aggression. |
| |
Keywords: | Attention bias Memory bias Aggression Fragile high self-esteem College students |
|
|