Navarrete Carlos David, Olsson Andreas, Ho Arnold K, Mendes Wendy Berry, Thomsen Lotte, Sidanius James
Department of Psychology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824, USA.
Psychol Sci. 2009 Feb;20(2):155-8. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-9280.2009.02273.x. Epub 2009 Jan 16.
Conditioning studies on humans and other primates show that fear responses acquired toward danger-relevant stimuli, such as snakes, resist extinction, whereas responses toward danger-irrelevant stimuli, such as birds, are more readily extinguished. Similar evolved biases may extend to human groups, as recent research demonstrates that a conditioned fear response to faces of persons of a social out-group resists extinction, whereas fear toward a social in-group is more readily extinguished. Here, we provide an important extension to previous work by demonstrating that this fear-extinction bias occurs solely when the exemplars are male. These results underscore the importance of considering how gender of the target stimulus affects psychological and physiological responses to out-group threat.
对人类和其他灵长类动物的条件作用研究表明,对与危险相关的刺激(如蛇)产生的恐惧反应难以消退,而对与危险无关的刺激(如鸟)的反应则更容易消退。类似的进化倾向可能也适用于人类群体,因为最近的研究表明,对社会外群体成员面孔的条件性恐惧反应难以消退,而对社会内群体的恐惧则更容易消退。在这里,我们通过证明这种恐惧消退偏差仅在刺激对象为男性时才会出现,对先前的研究进行了重要扩展。这些结果强调了考虑目标刺激的性别如何影响对外群体威胁的心理和生理反应的重要性。