TOPIC D - case studies Flashcards

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1
Q

What is Bennet-Levy and Marteau procedure?

A

-used 2 questions about 29 animals
-participants told that none of the animals were dangerous
QUESTIONNAIRE 1 - asked about fear of animals and how close the person would like to get to them (scale for fear: 1-3) (scale for closeness: 1-5)
QUESTIONNAIRE 2 - measure how the participants felt about each animal
they rated each species on a 3 point scale for:
ugliness
how steady they were
sliminess
how suddenly they move

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2
Q

how many people took part in the questionnaires for Bennett-levy and Marteau?

A

30 men and 34 women - 1

24 men and 25 women - 2

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3
Q

What is Bennet-Levy and Marteau findings?

A
  • most feared = rats, cockroach, jelly fish, spider, slug

- least feared = robin, lamb, cat, ladybird, rabbbit

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4
Q

What is Bennet-Levy and Marteau aim?

A

to see whether we’re more afraid of, or avoid animals that:

  • move quickly
  • move suddenly
  • look very different from people
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5
Q

what was Bennet-Let and Marteau conclusions?

A
  • the features of ugliness,sliminess, speediness and sudden movement all make animals for frightening
  • ugliness is judged by how different an animal if from a human
  • the fear of certain animal supports the idea that preparedness relates to an animals features
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6
Q

what was Bennet-Let and Marteau strengths

A
  • different participants answered the two questionaries which helped make sure they didn’t know what the aim was about
  • men and women were used who have different phobias so the findings apply to both genders
  • it was ethical because the participants Disney need to see the animals which would’ve frightened some of them
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7
Q

what was Bennet-Let and Marteau weaknesses?

A
  • the instruction wasn’t very successful because the participants were told the animals weren’t dangerous but may still thought that rats were harmful
  • the questionnaire only asked about six factors in the interviews
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8
Q

what was the Mineka et al study?

A
  • they found that their laboratory monkeys that had grown up in the wild were afraid of snakes
  • the ones born in captivity weren’t afraid of snakes
  • they tested the idea that monkeys had late bed in the wild to be afraid of snakes by observing their reactions to snakes and other things
  • the lab born monkeys then watched the wild born monkeys reaction to the objects and they became afraid of the snakes
  • they thought that the wild born monkeys had learned their behaviour form observing adults
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9
Q

what is Coombes et al study?

A
  • let two rats drink from same spout
  • one rat had been given an injection to make it sick
  • later both rats avoided drinking from the spout because it had seen the other rat being sick
  • the tat that hadn’t been sick learned not to drink the water because it saw an unpleasant effect
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10
Q

Explain little Albert

A

before:
NS = white rat (no effect) > UCS = hearing a big clang from hammer and steel > UCR= fear
during:
NS= white rat + UCS = big clang from hammer and steel > UCR = fear
after:
CS = white rat > CR= fear

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11
Q

Ohman aim

A

the researchers waned to find out whether people were genetically developed to be afraid of situations/objects that could be potentially threatening

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12
Q

Ohman procedure

A
  • participants were put into different groups
  • one condition they warts given an electrical shock when looking at pictures of a house or flowers
  • the other conditioned they were also given an electrical shock but they were shown pictures of snakes and spiders
  • level of fear was measured by a galvanic skin response (GRS)
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13
Q

ohman findings

A
  • both groups shower fear when they were shown pictures that they had experienced an electrical shock with
  • the GCR was still higher for those when pictures were shown of spiders and snakes
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14
Q

ohman conclusion

A

they are more likely to develop some phobias than others which suggests that we may have developed to equine phobias to situations or objects that are threatening

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15
Q

Preparedness Theory:

Seligmal

A
  • it says that we have developed phobias to objects or situations that are potentially threatening to us thousands of years ago
  • those who developed a phobia today are those people who avoided those situations in hunter times
  • so the behaviour to avoid objects or situations has evolved over time > passed on trough genetics
  • it maintained that there was a biological preparedness - we aren’t born with phobias, we are born with the understanding of potentially harming objects which create a phobia
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16
Q

Heinrichs et al aim

A

they wanted to see if being brought up in different culture affected social anxiety and fear of blushing

17
Q

Heinrichs et al design

A
  • 909 university students that study psychology were tested
  • from 8 different universities from 8 different countries (volunteers)
  • they were divided into two groups:
    collectivises and individualists cultures based on were they lived
18
Q

Heinrichs et al two groups with countries

A

individualists:
- USA
- Australia
- Canada
- The Netherlands
- Germany
collectivists:
- Spain
- Korea
- Japan

19
Q

Heinrichs et al procedure

A
  • participants were given a short descriptions of a social situation and asked how they’d react
  • participants were also asked to completed a social anxiety and blushing questionnaire
20
Q

Heinrichs et al results

A
  • collectivists cultures often respond in a way that showed a high anxiety
  • they gave answers that avoided public interaction or speaking
  • they were also more fearful of blushing and scored higher on the social anxiety question
21
Q

Heinrichs et al order of highest anxiety to lowest

A
Japan 
Korea
Spain 
USA
Canada
Australia 
The Netherlands 
Germany
22
Q

Heinrichs et al conclusion

A
  • collectivists culture show greater social anxiety and fear of blushing
  • collectivists countries have strict rules about acceptable behaviour
  • collectivists culture hold back through fear of letting the group down if they’re wrong
  • social not as are more Important for collectivists culture as the behaviour of an individual affects the whole group
23
Q

little Peter aim

A

to investigate whether a phobia in a little by could be deco distilled and where this would generalise to other objects

24
Q

little Peter procedure

A
  • he was 2 years and 10 months old
  • she watched him playing with beads in his cot and an experimenter showed him a white rat
  • he screamed
  • he was moved away, leaving his heads behind
  • when the rat touched the beads he protested but not when another child touched them
  • the next day his reactions to different objects were observed, his fear of rats generalised to other objects