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Journal Article

Citation

Thrasher C, Lobue V. J. Exp. Child Psychol. 2015; 142: 382-390.

Affiliation

Department of Psychology, Rutgers University, Newark, NJ 07102, USA. Electronic address: vlobue@psychology.rutgers.edu.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.jecp.2015.09.013

PMID

26483161

Abstract

In the current research, we sought to measure infants' physiological responses to snakes-one of the world's most widely feared stimuli-to examine whether they find snakes aversive or merely attention grabbing. Using a similar method to DeLoache and LoBue (Developmental Science, 2009, Vol. 12, pp. 201-207), 6- to 9-month-olds watched a series of multimodal (both auditory and visual) stimuli: a video of a snake (fear-relevant) or an elephant (non-fear-relevant) paired with either a fearful or happy auditory track. We measured physiological responses to the pairs of stimuli, including startle magnitude, latency to startle, and heart rate.

RESULTS suggest that snakes capture infants' attention; infants showed the fastest startle responses and lowest average heart rate to the snakes, especially when paired with a fearful voice. Unexpectedly, they also showed significantly reduced startle magnitude during this same snake video plus fearful voice combination. The results are discussed with respect to theoretical perspectives on fear acquisition.


Language: en

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