Emotional Reaction to Fear- and Disgust-Evoking Snakes: Sensitivity and Propensity in Snake-Fearful Respondents

. 2020 ; 11 () : 31. [epub] 20200128

Status PubMed-not-MEDLINE Jazyk angličtina Země Švýcarsko Médium electronic-ecollection

Typ dokumentu časopisecké články

Perzistentní odkaz   https://www.medvik.cz/link/pmid32047463

This paper continues our previous study in which we examined the respondents' reaction to two morphologically different snake stimuli categories - one evoking exclusively fear and another evoking exclusively disgust. Here we acquired Likert-type scale scores of fear and disgust evoked by the same snake stimuli by a total of 330 respondents. Moreover, we collected data about the respondents' age, gender, education, snake fear [Snake Questionnaire (SNAQ)], and disgust propensity [Disgust Scale-Revised (DS-R)], and we analyzed the effect of these variables on the emotional scores (with special focus on snake-fearful respondents). In addition, we collected the SNAQ and DS-R scores from the respondents tested in the previous study using the rank-ordering method to directly compare the results of these two approaches. The results showed that non-fearful respondents give high scores of fear to the fear-eliciting snakes and high scores of disgust to the disgust-eliciting snakes, but they give low scores of the other emotional dimension (disgust/fear) to each. In contrast, snake-fearful respondents not only give higher fear and disgust scores to the respective snake stimuli, but they also give high scores of fear to the disgust-eliciting snakes and high scores of disgust to the fear-eliciting snakes. Both Likert-scale scores and rank-ordering data show that the clear border dividing both snake stimuli categories dissolves when evaluated by the snake-fearful respondents.

Zobrazit více v PubMed

Ballouard J. M., Provost G., Barré D., Bonnet X. (2012). Influence of a field trip on the attitude of schoolchildren toward unpopular organisms: an experience with snakes. DOI

Barrett L. F. (2006). Valence is a basic building block of emotional life. DOI

Barrett L. F., Wager T. D. (2006). The structure of emotion: evidence from neuroimaging studies. DOI

Cicchetti D. V. (1994). Guidelines, criteria, and rules of thumb for evaluating normed and standardized assessment instruments in psychology. DOI

Cisler J. M., Olatunji B. O., Lohr J. M. (2009). Disgust sensitivity and emotion regulation potentiate the effect of disgust propensity on spider fear, blood-injection-injury fear, and contamination fear. PubMed DOI PMC

Coelho C. M., Suttiwan P., Faiz A. M., Ferreira-Santos F., Zsido A. N. (2019). Are humans prepared to detect, fear, and avoid snakes? The mismatch between laboratory and ecological evidence. PubMed DOI PMC

Constantine R., McNally R. J., Hornig C. D. (2001). Snake fear and the pictorial emotional Stroop paradigm. DOI

Davey G. C. (1994). Self−reported fears to common indigenous animals in an adult UK population: the role of disgust sensitivity. PubMed DOI

Eaton W. W., Bienvenu O. J., Miloyan B. (2018). Specific phobias. PubMed DOI PMC

Field A. (2013).

Flykt A., Bänziger T., Lindeberg S. (2017). Intensity of vocal responses to spider and snake pictures in fearful individuals. DOI

Flykt A., Caldara R. (2006). Tracking fear in snake and spider fearful participants during visual search: a multi-response domain study. DOI

Fredrikson M., Annas P., Fischer H., Wik G. (1996). Gender and age differences in the prevalence of specific fears and phobias. PubMed DOI

Frynta D., Lišková S., Bültmann S., Burda H. (2010). Being attractive brings advantages: the case of parrot species in captivity. PubMed DOI PMC

Frynta D., Marešová E., Landová E., Lišková S., Šimková O., Tichá I., et al. (2009). “Are animals in Zoos rather conspicuous than endangered?,” in

Frynta D., Marešová J., Řeháková-Petrů M., Šklíba J., Šumbera R., Krása A. (2011). Cross-cultural agreement in perception of animal beauty: boid snakes viewed by people from five continents. DOI

Frynta D., Šimková O., Lišková S., Landová E. (2013). Mammalian collection on Noah’s ark: the effects of beauty, brain and body size. PubMed DOI PMC

Greene H. W. (1983). Dietary correlates of the origin and radiation of snakes. DOI

Haberkamp A., Schmidt F., Schmidt T. (2013). Rapid visuomotor processing of phobic images in spider-and snake-fearful participants. PubMed DOI

Haidt J., McCauley C., Rozin P. (1994). Individual differences in sensitivity to disgust: a scale sampling seven domains of disgust elicitors. DOI

Hallgren K. A. (2012). Computing inter-rater reliability for observational data: an overview and tutorial. PubMed DOI PMC

Hilbert K., Evens R., Maslowski N. I., Wittchen H. U., Lueken U. (2015). Neurostructural correlates of two subtypes of specific phobia: a voxel-based morphometry study. PubMed DOI

Hoehl S., Hellmer K., Johansson M., Gredebäck G. (2017). Itsy bitsy spider: Infants react with increased arousal to spiders and snakes. PubMed DOI PMC

Hsiang A. Y., Field D. J., Webster T. H., Behlke A. D., Davis M. B., Racicot R. A., et al. (2015). The origin of snakes: revealing the ecology, behavior, and evolutionary history of early snakes using genomics, phenomics, and the fossil record. PubMed DOI PMC

Isbell L. A. (2006). Snakes as agents of evolutionary change in primate brains. PubMed DOI

Isbell L. A. (2009).

Janovcová M., Rádlová S., Polák J., Sedláčková K., Peléšková Š, Žampachová B., et al. (2019). Human attitude toward reptiles: a relationship between fear, disgust, and aesthetic preferences. PubMed DOI PMC

Kasturiratne A., Wickremasinghe A. R., de Silva N., Gunawardena N. K., Pathmeswaran A., Premaratna R., et al. (2008). The global burden of snakebite: a literature analysis and modelling based on regional estimates of envenoming and deaths. PubMed DOI PMC

Kawai H. (2019).

Klieger D. M. (1987). The snake anxiety questionnaire as a measure of ophidophobia. DOI

Klieger D. M., Siejak K. K. (1997). Disgust as the source of false positive effects in the measurement of ophidiophobia. PubMed DOI

Klorman R., Weerts T. C., Hastings J. E., Melamed B. G., Lang P. J. (1974). Psychometric description of some specific-fear questionnaires. DOI

Landová E., Bakhshaliyeva N., Janovcová M., Peléšková Š, Suleymanova M., Polák J., et al. (2018). Association between fear and beauty evaluation of snakes: cross-cultural findings. PubMed DOI PMC

Landová E., Marešová J., Šimková O., Cikánová V., Frynta D. (2012). Human responses to live snakes and their photographs: evaluation of beauty and fear of the king snakes. DOI

Likert R. (1932). A technique for the measurement of attitudes.

Lipp O. V., Waters A. M. (2007). When danger lurks in the background: attentional capture by animal fear-relevant distractors is specific and selectively enhanced by animal fear. PubMed DOI

Lišková S., Landová E., Frynta D. (2015). Human preferences for colorful birds: vivid colors or pattern? PubMed DOI

LoBue V., Rakison D. H., DeLoache J. S. (2010). Threat perception across the life span: evidence for multiple converging pathways. DOI

Lueken U., Kruschwitz J. D., Muehlhan M., Siegert J., Hoyer J., Wittchen H. U. (2011). How specific is specific phobia? Different neural response patterns in two subtypes of specific phobia. PubMed DOI

Marešová J., Frynta D. (2008). Noah’s Ark is full of common species attractive to humans: the case of boid snakes in zoos. DOI

Marešová J., Krása A., Frynta D. (2009a). We all appreciate the same animals: cross−cultural comparison of human aesthetic preferences for snake species in Papua New Guinea and Europe. DOI

Marešová J., Landová E., Frynta D. (2009b). What makes some species of milk snakes more attractive to humans than others? PubMed DOI

Mataix−Cols D., An S. K., Lawrence N. S., Caseras X., Speckens A., Giampietro V., et al. (2008). Individual differences in disgust sensitivity modulate neural responses to aversive/disgusting stimuli. PubMed DOI

Matchett G., Davey G. C. (1991). A test of a disease-avoidance model of animal phobias. PubMed DOI

McGlynn F. D., Puhr J. J., Gaynor R., Perry J. W. (1973). Skin conductance responses to real and imagined snakes among avoidant and non-avoidant college students. PubMed DOI

McGlynn F. D., Wheeler S. A., Wilamowska Z. A., Katz J. S. (2008). Detection of change in threat-related and innocuous scenes among snake-fearful and snake-tolerant participants: data from the flicker task. PubMed DOI

McGraw K. O., Wong S. P. (1996). Forming inferences about some intraclass correlation coefficients. DOI

Miltner W. H., Trippe R. H., Krieschel S., Gutberlet I., Hecht H., Weiss T. (2005). Event-related brain potentials and affective responses to threat in spider/snake-phobic and non-phobic subjects. PubMed DOI

Nicholson E., Barnes-Holmes D. (2012). Developing an implicit measure of disgust propensity and disgust sensitivity: examining the role of implicit disgust propensity and sensitivity in obsessive-compulsive tendencies. PubMed DOI

Öhman A. (2005). The role of the amygdala in human fear: automatic detection of threat. PubMed DOI

Öhman A., Carlsson K., Lundqvist D., Ingvar M. (2007). On the unconscious subcortical origin of human fear. PubMed DOI

Öhman A., Flykt A., Esteves F. (2001). Emotion drives attention: detecting the snake in the grass. PubMed DOI

Öhman A., Mineka S. (2001). Fears, phobias, and preparedness: toward an evolved module of fear and fear learning. PubMed DOI

Öhman A., Mineka S. (2003). The malicious serpent: snakes as a prototypical stimulus for an evolved module of fear. DOI

Öhman A., Soares J. J. (1994). “Unconscious anxiety”: phobic responses to masked stimuli. PubMed DOI

Oksanen J., Blanchet F. G., Friendly M., Kindt R., Legendre P., McGlinn D., et al. (2017). Vegan: community ecology package.

Olatunji B. O., Cisler J. M., Deacon B. J., Connolly K., Lohr J. M. (2007). The disgust propensity and sensitivity scale-revised: psychometric properties and specificity in relation to anxiety disorder symptoms. PubMed DOI

Pallant J. (2007).

Pillai K. C. S. (1955). Some new test criteria in multivariate analysis. DOI

Polák J., Landová E., Frynta D. (2019a). Undisguised disgust: a psychometric evaluation of a disgust propensity measure. DOI

Polák J., Rádlová S., Janovcová M., Flegr J., Landová E., Frynta D. (2019b). Scary and nasty beasts: self-reported fear and disgust of common phobic animals. PubMed

Polák J., Sedláčková K., Nácar D., Landová E., Frynta D. (2016). Fear the serpent: a psychometric study of snake phobia. PubMed DOI

Prokop P., Tunnicliffe S. D. (2008). Disgusting animals: primary school children’s attitudes and myths of bats and spiders. DOI

Ptáčková J., Landová E., Lišková S., Kuběna A., Frynta D. (2017). Are the aesthetic preferences towards snake species already formed in pre-school aged children? DOI

R Development Core Team, (2010).

Rachman S. (1977). The conditioning theory of fearacquisition: a critical examination. PubMed DOI

Rádlová S., Janovcová M., Sedláčková K., Polák J., Nácar D., Peléšková Š, et al. (2019). Snakes represent emotionally salient stimuli that may evoke both fear and disgust. PubMed DOI PMC

Rosa P. J., Esteves F., Arriaga P. (2014). “Effects of fear-relevant stimuli on attention: integrating gaze data with subliminal exposure,” in

Rosa P. J., Gamito P., Oliveira J., Morais D. (2011). Attentional orienting to biologically fear-relevant stimuli: data from eye tracking using the continual alternation flicker paradigm.

Russell J. A., Barrett L. F. (1999). Core affect, prototypical emotional episodes, and other things called emotion: dissecting the elephant. PubMed DOI

Schäfer A., Leutgeb V., Reishofer G., Ebner F., Schienle A. (2009). Propensity and sensitivity measures of fear and disgust are differentially related to emotion-specific brain activation. PubMed DOI

Seligman M. E. (1971). Phobias and preparedness. PubMed DOI

Shrout P. E., Fleiss J. L. (1979). Intraclass correlations: uses in assessing rater reliability. PubMed DOI

StatSoft Inc. (2010).

Thrasher C., LoBue V. (2016). Do infants find snakes aversive? Infants’ physiological responses to “fear-relevant” stimuli. PubMed DOI

Tierney K. J., Connolly M. K. (2013). A review of the evidence for a biological basis for snake fears in humans. DOI

Tomažič I. (2011). Pre-Service biology teachers’ and primary school students’ attitudes toward and knowledge about snakes. DOI

Uetz P., Freed P., Hošek J. (2019).

van Overveld M., de Jong P. J., Peters M. L. (2010). The disgust propensity and sensitivity scale–revised: its predictive value for avoidance behavior. DOI

van Overveld W. J. M., De Jong P. J., Peters M. L., Cavanagh K., Davey G. C. L. (2006). Disgust propensity and disgust sensitivity: separate constructs that are differentially related to specific fears. DOI

Vernon L. L., Berenbaum H. (2008). Fear and disgust propensity in spider phobic distress. PubMed DOI

Wardenaar K. J., Lim C. C., Al-Hamzawi A. O., Alonso J., Andrade L. H., Benjet C., et al. (2017). The cross-national epidemiology of specific phobia in the world mental health surveys. PubMed DOI PMC

Waters A. M., Lipp O. V. (2008). The influence of animal fear on attentional capture by fear-relevant animal stimuli in children. PubMed DOI

Waters A. M., Lipp O. V., Randhawa R. S. (2011). Visual search with animal fear-relevant stimuli: a tale of two procedures. DOI

Webb K., Davey G. C. (1992). Disgust sensitivity and fear of animals: effect of exposure to violent or revulsive material. DOI

Wheeler B. C., Bradley B. J., Kamilar J. M. (2011). Predictors of orbital convergence in primates: a test of the snake detection hypothesis of primate evolution. PubMed DOI

Wiens S., Peira N., Golkar A., Öhman A. (2008). Recognizing masked threat: fear betrays, but disgust you can trust. PubMed DOI

Wikström J., Lundh L. G., Westerlund J., Högman L. (2004). Preattentive bias for snake words in snake phobia? PubMed DOI

Zsido A. N. (2017). The spider and the snake–A psychometric study of two phobias and insights from the Hungarian validation. PubMed DOI

Zsido A. N., Arato N., Inhof O., Janszky J., Darnai G. (2018). Short versions of two specific phobia measures: the snake and the spider questionnaires. PubMed DOI

Nejnovějších 20 citací...

Zobrazit více v
Medvik | PubMed

Imprint of ancestral and modern threats in human mind - experience of fear, disgust, and anger

. 2024 ; 15 () : 1520224. [epub] 20250115

Attentional, emotional, and behavioral response toward spiders, scorpions, crabs, and snakes provides no evidence for generalized fear between spiders and scorpions

. 2023 Nov 28 ; 13 (1) : 20972. [epub] 20231128

Are vipers prototypic fear-evoking snakes? A cross-cultural comparison of Somalis and Czechs

. 2023 ; 14 () : 1233667. [epub] 20231019

Animals evoking fear in the Cradle of Humankind: snakes, scorpions, and large carnivores

. 2023 Jul 05 ; 110 (4) : 33. [epub] 20230705

Human emotional evaluation of ancestral and modern threats: fear, disgust, and anger

. 2023 ; 14 () : 1321053. [epub] 20240104

Specificity of spiders among fear- and disgust-eliciting arthropods: Spiders are special, but phobics not so much

. 2021 ; 16 (9) : e0257726. [epub] 20210923

The Ultimate List of the Most Frightening and Disgusting Animals: Negative Emotions Elicited by Animals in Central European Respondents

. 2021 Mar 09 ; 11 (3) : . [epub] 20210309

Venomous snakes elicit stronger fear than nonvenomous ones: Psychophysiological response to snake images

. 2020 ; 15 (8) : e0236999. [epub] 20200819

Najít záznam

Citační ukazatele

Pouze přihlášení uživatelé

Možnosti archivace

Nahrávání dat ...