Haberkamp Anke, Schmidt Filipp, Schmidt Thomas
University of Kaiserslautern, Germany.
Acta Psychol (Amst). 2013 Oct;144(2):232-42. doi: 10.1016/j.actpsy.2013.07.001. Epub 2013 Aug 7.
This study investigates enhanced visuomotor processing of phobic compared to fear-relevant and neutral stimuli. We used a response priming design to measure rapid, automatic motor activation by natural images (spiders, snakes, mushrooms, and flowers) in spider-fearful, snake-fearful, and control participants. We found strong priming effects in all tasks and conditions; however, results showed marked differences between groups. Most importantly, in the group of spider-fearful individuals, spider pictures had a strong and specific influence on even the fastest motor responses: Phobic primes entailed the largest priming effects, and phobic targets accelerated responses, both effects indicating speeded response activation by phobic images. In snake-fearful participants, this processing enhancement for phobic material was less pronounced and extended to both snake and spider images. We conclude that spider phobia leads to enhanced processing capacity for phobic images. We argue that this is enabled by long-term perceptual learning processes.
本研究调查了与恐惧相关和中性刺激相比,恐惧症患者视觉运动加工的增强情况。我们采用反应启动设计,以测量蜘蛛恐惧者、蛇恐惧者和对照组参与者对自然图像(蜘蛛、蛇、蘑菇和花朵)的快速、自动运动激活。我们在所有任务和条件下均发现了强烈的启动效应;然而,结果显示不同组之间存在显著差异。最重要的是,在蜘蛛恐惧个体组中,蜘蛛图片对即使是最快的运动反应也有强烈而特定的影响:恐惧症启动刺激产生了最大的启动效应,而恐惧症目标刺激加速了反应,这两种效应均表明恐惧症图像加快了反应激活。在蛇恐惧参与者中,对恐惧材料的这种加工增强不太明显,且扩展到了蛇和蜘蛛图像。我们得出结论,蜘蛛恐惧症导致对恐惧图像的加工能力增强。我们认为这是由长期的知觉学习过程促成的。