Data and materials from: "You see what you avoid: Fear of spiders and avoidance are associated with predominance of spiders in binocular rivalry"
Item Type: | Dataset |
---|---|
Title: | Data and materials from: "You see what you avoid: Fear of spiders and avoidance are associated with predominance of spiders in binocular rivalry" |
Date: | 2022 |
Creator: | Müller, Ulrich W. D. ; Gerdes, Antje B. M. ; Alpers, Georg W. |
Divisions: | School of Social Sciences > Klinische u. Biologische Psychologie u. Psychotherapie (Alpers 2010-) |
DDC Classification: |
150 Psychology |
---|---|
Keywords: | Binocular rivalry Visual perception Perceptual biases Anxiety Fear of spiders Specific phobia |
Abstract: | This dataset contains the data and materials from the paper “You see what you avoid: Fear of spiders and avoidance are associated with predominance of spiders in binocular rivalry”. What we see is the result of an efficient selection of cues in the visual stream. In addition to physical characteristics this process is also influenced by emotional salience of the cues. Previously, we showed in spider phobic patients that fear-related pictures gain preferential access to consciousness in binocular rivalry. We set out to replicate this in an independent unselected sample and examine the relationship of this perceptual bias with a range of symptom clusters. To this end, we recruited 79 participants with variable degrees of fear of spiders. To induce binocular rivalry, a picture of either a spider or a flower was projected to one eye, and a neutral geometric pattern to the other eye. Participants continuously reported what they saw. We correlated indices of perceptual dominance (first percept, dominance duration) with individual fear of spiders and with scores on specific symptom clusters of fear of spiders (i.e., vigilance, fixation, and avoidance coping). Overall, higher fear of spiders correlates with more predominace of spider pictures. In addition, this perceptual bias is uniquely associated with avoidance coping. Interestingly, this demonstrates that a perceptual bias, which is not intentionally controlled, is linked with an instrumental coping behavior, that has been implicated in the maintenance of pathological fear. |
URL: | https://madata.bib.uni-mannheim.de/397/ |
---|---|
DOI: | https://doi.org/10.7801/397 |
Availability (Controlled): | Delivery |
Availability: | Send a request to alpers@uni-mannheim.de |
DOI (External): |
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.janxdis.2021.102513 |
File | Filename / Infos | Link |
---|---|---|
Archive (Data)
Filename: Data.7z No License defined Restricted to Private (Only you and Repository Staff) |
Download (92kB)
| Request a copy
|
|
Archive (Figures)
Filename: Figures.7z No License defined Restricted to Private (Only you and Repository Staff) |
Download (2MB)
| Request a copy
|
|
Archive (Methods)
Filename: Methods.7z No License defined Restricted to Private (Only you and Repository Staff) |
Download (2MB)
| Request a copy
|
|
Text (Text file with information on project and folders)
Filename: ReadMe.txt No License defined Restricted to Private (Only you and Repository Staff) |
Download (1kB)
| Request a copy
|
Depositing User: | osidata |
---|---|
Date Deposited: | 20 May 2022 11:54 |
Last Modified: | 01 Mar 2024 07:18 |
Actions (login required)
View Item |