1. Effects of dispositional and temporarily primed attachment security on response inhibition following ego-depletion among Chinese college students.
- Author
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Li, Caina, Liu, Jia, Zhang, Shupeng, Huo, Yongquan, You, Jin, and Wang, Ke
- Subjects
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ATTACHMENT behavior , *EGO (Psychology) , *PSYCHOLOGY of college students , *PSYCHOLOGY , *CHINESE people , *AVOIDANCE (Psychology) , *TASK performance - Abstract
Attachment security refers to individuals' ability of viewing attachment figures as a secure base for exploration and a safe haven in times of need. Two studies examined whether dispositional and temporarily primed attachment security could improve response inhibition following ego-depletion among Chinese college students. We manipulated ego-depletion with a stressful task — preparing a three-minute speech within 5 min and assessed response inhibition with Stroop color naming tasks. Study 1 randomly assigned participants to the ego-depletion and control groups and assessed dispositional attachment anxiety and avoidance. Results showed that participants in the ego-depletion group reacted slower to incongruent trials than their counterparts. Whereas attachment avoidance predicted faster reactions to incongruent trials in the ego-depletion group, such relationship was absent in the control group. Study 2 randomly asked participants to visualize a responsive and available other (attachment security priming condition) or an acquaintance (acquaintance priming condition). Results indicated that following ego-depletion, attachment avoidance again predicted faster reactions to incongruent trials, and participants from the attachment security priming condition also reacted faster to incongruent trials than those from the acquaintance priming condition. Findings offer additional support for social defense theory and the broaden-and-build cycle of attachment security. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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