Visual search for animal fear-relevant stimuli in children

This study examined visual search for animal fear stimuli and whether high fear levels influence children's visual search. Experiment 1 was conducted with adults to provide a control for the effects observed in Experiments 2 and 3 with children. Both adults and children were faster to locate sn...

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Main Authors: Waters, A., Lipp, Ottmar, Spence, S.
Format: Journal Article
Published: John Wiley & Sons Ltd. 2008
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/38459
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author Waters, A.
Lipp, Ottmar
Spence, S.
author_facet Waters, A.
Lipp, Ottmar
Spence, S.
author_sort Waters, A.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description This study examined visual search for animal fear stimuli and whether high fear levels influence children's visual search. Experiment 1 was conducted with adults to provide a control for the effects observed in Experiments 2 and 3 with children. Both adults and children were faster to locate snakes and spiders among flowers and mushrooms than vice versa in arrays of nine but not of four pictures. Both groups were also faster to determine target absence from arrays of snakes and spiders than flowers and mushrooms regardless of array size. Experiment 3 showed that compared with low-fearful children, those who feared snakes and spiders did not show a search advantage for determining target absence from arrays containing snakes and spiders compared with flowers and mushrooms. These results support preferential search for animal fear stimuli in children and suggest that high fearfulness affects children's ability to disengage attention from feared stimuli. © The Australian Psychological Society Ltd.
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publishDate 2008
publisher John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-384592017-09-13T14:12:16Z Visual search for animal fear-relevant stimuli in children Waters, A. Lipp, Ottmar Spence, S. This study examined visual search for animal fear stimuli and whether high fear levels influence children's visual search. Experiment 1 was conducted with adults to provide a control for the effects observed in Experiments 2 and 3 with children. Both adults and children were faster to locate snakes and spiders among flowers and mushrooms than vice versa in arrays of nine but not of four pictures. Both groups were also faster to determine target absence from arrays of snakes and spiders than flowers and mushrooms regardless of array size. Experiment 3 showed that compared with low-fearful children, those who feared snakes and spiders did not show a search advantage for determining target absence from arrays containing snakes and spiders compared with flowers and mushrooms. These results support preferential search for animal fear stimuli in children and suggest that high fearfulness affects children's ability to disengage attention from feared stimuli. © The Australian Psychological Society Ltd. 2008 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/38459 10.1080/00049530701549346 John Wiley & Sons Ltd. restricted
spellingShingle Waters, A.
Lipp, Ottmar
Spence, S.
Visual search for animal fear-relevant stimuli in children
title Visual search for animal fear-relevant stimuli in children
title_full Visual search for animal fear-relevant stimuli in children
title_fullStr Visual search for animal fear-relevant stimuli in children
title_full_unstemmed Visual search for animal fear-relevant stimuli in children
title_short Visual search for animal fear-relevant stimuli in children
title_sort visual search for animal fear-relevant stimuli in children
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/38459