Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
909496 Journal of Anxiety Disorders 2011 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

A large body of evidence suggests an important role of disgust in contamination fear (CF). A separate line of research implicates various cognitive mechanisms in contamination fear, including obsessive beliefs, memory biases, and delayed attentional disengagement from threat. This study is an initial attempt to integrate these two lines of research and examines whether disgust and delayed attention disengagement from threat explain unique or overlapping processes within CF. Non-clinical undergraduate students (N = 108) completed a spatial cueing task, which provided measures of delayed disengagement from frightening and disgusting cues, and a self-report measure of disgust propensity (DP). Participants also completed a chain of contagion task, in which they provided contamination appraisals of an object as a function of degrees of removal from an initial contaminant. Results demonstrated that DP predicted greater initial contamination appraisals, but a sharper decline in estimations across further degrees of removal from the contaminant. Delayed disengagement from disgust cues uniquely predicted sustained elevations in contamination estimations across further degrees of removal from the contaminant. These results suggest that DP and delayed disengagement from disgust cues explain unique and complimentary processes in contamination appraisals, which suggests the utility of incorporating the disparate affective and cognitive lines of research on CF.

Research highlights▶ Individual differences in disgust propensity predicted greater contamination appraisals of objects that have been directly contaminated. Individual differences in the ability to disengage attention from disgust cues predicted greater contamination appraisals of objects with only distal and indirect contact with the initial contaminant. These results suggest that affective and cognitive mechanisms may play unique, but complimentary, roles in mediating contamination fear.

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