explaining phobias

Cards (17)

  • phobia:
    • intense, persistant and irrational fear of an object, context or activity
    • fear is atypical when people have an extreme reaction to a non-threatening or mildy threatening situation
  • types of phobias:
    • specific phobias
    • social phobias
    • agoraphobia
  • specific phobias:
    • fears about specific objects or situations e.g spiders, flying
  • social phobias:
    • anxiety relating to social situations e.g public speaking, using public toilet
  • agoraphobia:
    • fear of being outside or in public spaces
  • Behavioural characteristics of phobias:
    • panic - screaming, crying
    • avoidance - prevent contact with stimulus
    • endurance - choose to remain with stimulus but keep a wary eye
  • emotional characteristics of phobias:
    • anxiety - unpleasant high arousal, prevents relaxation and can be long term
    • fear - immediate and extremely unpleasant experience, more intense than anxiety
  • cognitive characteristics of phobias:
    • selective attention - struggle to focus on anything else
    • irrational beliefs - resistant to rational arguements
    • cognitive distortions - inaccurate or unrealistic perceptions
  • two process model:
    • mowrer proposed model based on behavioural approach towards phobias
    • phobias acquired through classical conditioning and maintained through operant conditioning
  • classical conditioning:
    • associate a neutral stimulus with something we're afraid of
    • unconditioned stimulus: ant attack, unconditioned response: fear, neutral stimulus: flower, conditioned stimulus: flower, conditioned response: fear
  • watson and rayner: little albert procedure
    • 9 month baby
    • shown many stimuli - fear only shown when banging metal bar with hammer
    • 2 months later albert returned - shown white rat when banging
  • little albert findings:
    • after trials, albert showed fear when shown the rat
    • ucs: banging, ucr: fear, ns and cs: white rat, cr: fear
  • stimulus generalisation:
    • conditioning generalises to similar objects
    • rabbit, fur coat, watson wearing santa beard made out of cotton balls
  • operant conditioning:
    • fear leads to avoidance which leads to phobia persistance
    • avoiding has desirable consequences so we feel rewarded (negative reinforcement)
  • EVALUATION: real world application to therapy
    • behaviourist idea have been used to develop exposure therapies (systematic desensitisation and flooding)based on conditioning
    • approach says phobias maintained through avoidance - avoidance prevented = no reinforcement = decline
    • therapies successfully used to treat phobias - support or behaviourist explanation
  • EVALUATION: ignores evolutionary factors
    • bournton - evolutionary factors play a role in phobias, especially id avoidance increases chance of survival
    • psychologists say we are predisposed to some phobias (snakes, heights) - innate, survival mechanism
    • innate predisposition is called preparedness (seligman) - casts doubts on model, suggests there is more to phobias than learning
  • EVALUATION: ignores cognitive factors
    • alternative explanation: cognitive approach - phobias develop as consequence of irrational thinking
    • person thinks that being in lift can trap and suffocate them - leads to extreme anxiety and triggers phobia
    • two process model doesnt fully explain symptoms of phobias