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What Happens When Verbal Threat Information and Vicarious Learning Combine?
journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-07, 18:50 authored by Chris Askew, Hannah Kessock-Philip, Andy FieldAndy FieldRecent research has shown that the verbal information and vicarious learning pathways to fear create long term fear cognitions and can create cognitive biases and avoidance in children. However, it is unlikely that these pathways operate in isolation in the aetiology of childhood fear and the interaction between these pathways is untested. Three preliminary experiments are reported that explore the combined effect of verbal threat information and vicarious learning on self-reported fear beliefs in 7-9-year-old children. Results showed that prior negative information significantly facilitated the effect of negative vicarious learning on children's fear beliefs (Experiment 1); however, there was not a significant combined effect of verbal threat information and vicarious learning when they the information was presented during (Experiment 2) or after (Experiment 3) vicarious learning. These results support the idea that verbal information can affect CS-US associations formed in subsequent vicarious learning events, but contradict the proposal that it can change fear beliefs already acquired through vicarious learning by changing how a person evaluates the vicarious learning episode.
History
Publication status
- Published
Journal
Behavioural and Cognitive PsychotherapyISSN
1352-4658Publisher
Cambridge University PressExternal DOI
Issue
4Volume
36Page range
491-505Department affiliated with
- Psychology Publications
Full text available
- No
Peer reviewed?
- Yes