39 results on '"Hirschberger G"'
Search Results
2. Conspiracy mentality and political orientation across 26 countries
- Author
-
Roland Imhoff, Felix Zimmer, Olivier Klein, João H. C. António, Maria Babinska, Adrian Bangerter, Michal Bilewicz, Nebojša Blanuša, Kosta Bovan, Rumena Bužarovska, Aleksandra Cichocka, Sylvain Delouvée, Karen M. Douglas, Asbjørn Dyrendal, Tom Etienne, Biljana Gjoneska, Sylvie Graf, Estrella Gualda, Gilad Hirschberger, Anna Kende, Yordan Kutiyski, Peter Krekó, Andre Krouwel, Silvia Mari, Jasna Milošević Đorđević, Maria Serena Panasiti, Myrto Pantazi, Ljupcho Petkovski, Giuseppina Porciello, André Rabelo, Raluca Nicoleta Radu, Florin A. Sava, Michael Schepisi, Robbie M. Sutton, Viren Swami, Hulda Thórisdóttir, Vladimir Turjačanin, Pascal Wagner-Egger, Iris Žeželj, Jan-Willem van Prooijen, Imhoff, R, Zimmer, F, Klein, O, António, J, Babinska, M, Bangerter, A, Bilewicz, M, Blanuša, N, Bovan, K, Bužarovska, R, Cichocka, A, Delouvée, S, Douglas, K, Dyrendal, A, Etienne, T, Gjoneska, B, Graf, S, Gualda, E, Hirschberger, G, Kende, A, Kutiyski, Y, Krekó, P, Krouwel, A, Mari, S, Đorđević, J, Panasiti, M, Pantazi, M, Petkovski, L, Porciello, G, Rabelo, A, Radu, R, Sava, F, Schepisi, M, Sutton, R, Swami, V, Thórisdóttir, H, Turjačanin, V, Wagner-Egger, P, Žeželj, I, van Prooijen, J, Communication Science, Network Institute, Communication Choices, Content and Consequences (CCCC), Social Psychology, IBBA, A-LAB, and Veritati - Repositório Institucional da Universidade Católica Portuguesa
- Subjects
SDG 16 - Peace ,Social Psychology ,300 Social sciences, sociology & anthropology ,SDG 16 - Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions ,Conspiracy theories ,BF ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Justice and Strong Institutions ,political orientaton ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Political orientation ,Nema ključnih riječi ,conspiracy mentality ,150 Psychology - Abstract
People differ in their general tendency to endorse conspiracy theories (that is, conspiracy mentality). Previous research yielded inconsistent findings on the relationship between conspiracy mentality and political orientation, showing a greater conspiracy mentality either among the political right (a linear relation) or amongst both the left and right extremes (a curvilinear relation). We revisited this relationship across two studies spanning 26 countries (combined N = 104,253) and found overall evidence for both linear and quadratic relations, albeit small and heterogeneous across countries. We also observed stronger support for conspiracy mentality among voters of opposition parties (that is, those deprived of political control). Nonetheless, the quadratic effect of political orientation remained significant when adjusting for political control deprivation. We conclude that conspiracy mentality is associated with extreme left- and especially extreme right-wing beliefs, and that this non-linear relation may be strengthened by, but is not reducible to, deprivation of political control.
- Published
- 2022
3. Investigating the Links Between Cultural Values and Belief in Conspiracy Theories: The Key Roles of Collectivism and Masculinity
- Author
-
André Luiz Alves Rabelo, Giuseppina Porciello, Hulda Thórisdóttir, Olivier Klein, Estrella Gualda, Biljana Gjoneska, Aleksandra Cichocka, Thomas Arciszewski, Ljupcho Petkovski, Gilad Hirschberger, Myrto Pantazi, Roland Imhoff, Rumena Bužarovska, Sylvie Graf, Jan-Willem van Prooijen, Felix Zimmer, Pascal Wagner-Egger, Kosta Bovan, Pia Lamberty, Vladimir Turjačanin, Maria Babińska, André Krouwel, Adrian Bangerter, Asbjørn Dyrendal, Jasna Milosevic, JP Prims, Viren Swami, Michael Schepisi, Sylvain Delouvée, Iris Zezelj, Jais Adam-Troian, Robbie M. Sutton, Michał Bilewicz, Anna Kende, Nebojša Blanuša, Silvia Mari, Matt Motyl, Maria Serena Panasiti, Péter Krekó, Karen M. Douglas, Elif Çelebi, Centre de Recherche en Psychologie de la Connaissance, du Langage et de l'Émotion (PsyCLÉ), Aix Marseille Université (AMU), Communication Science, Network Institute, Communication Choices, Content and Consequences (CCCC), Social Psychology, IBBA, A-LAB, Troian, J, Wagner-Egger, P, Motyl, M, Arciszewski, T, Imhoff, R, Zimmer, F, Klein, O, Babinska, M, Bangerter, A, Bilewicz, M, Blanuša, N, Bovan, K, Bužarovska, R, Cichocka, A, Çelebi, E, Delouvée, S, Douglas, K, Dyrendal, A, Gjoneska, B, Graf, S, Gualda, E, Hirschberger, G, Kende, A, Krekó, P, Krouwel, A, Lamberty, P, Mari, S, Milosevic, J, Panasiti, M, Pantazi, M, Petkovski, L, Porciello, G, Prims, J, Rabelo, A, Schepisi, M, Sutton, R, Swami, W, Thórisdóttir, H, Turjačanin, V, Zezelj, I, and van Prooijen, J
- Subjects
Cultural cognition ,Sociology and Political Science ,Social Psychology ,Psychologie sociale ,Situated cognition ,media_common.quotation_subject ,conspiracist beliefs ,cultural values ,situated cognition ,collectivism ,masculinity ,cross-cultural ,Conspiracist beliefs ,[SHS.PSY]Humanities and Social Sciences/Psychology ,050109 social psychology ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,cultural value ,Key (music) ,conspiracy theories ,Psychologie politique ,050602 political science & public administration ,Cross-cultural ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Hofstede's cultural dimensions theory ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,media_common ,M-PSI/05 - PSICOLOGIA SOCIALE ,Cultural values ,05 social sciences ,Perspective (graphical) ,Collectivism ,SDG 10 - Reduced Inequalities ,0506 political science ,culture ,Philosophy ,Clinical Psychology ,Masculinity ,Political Science and International Relations ,Psychologie inter-culturelle ,[SCCO.PSYC]Cognitive science/Psychology ,conspiracist belief ,Psychology ,61 Psicología ,Social psychology - Abstract
Research suggests that belief in conspiracy theories (CT) stems from basic psychological mechanisms and is linked to other belief systems (e.g. religious beliefs). While previous research has extensively examined individual and contextual variables associated with CT beliefs, it has not yet investigated the role of culture. In the current research, we tested, based on a situated cultural cognition perspective, the extent to which culture predicts CT beliefs. Using Hofstede’s model of cultural values, three nation-level analyses of data from 25, 19 and 18 countries using different measures of CT beliefs (Study 1, N = 5,323; Study 2a, N = 12,255; Study 2b, N = 30,994) revealed positive associations between Masculinity, Collectivism and CT beliefs. A cross-sectional study among US citizens (Study 3, N = 350), using individual-level measures of Hofstede’s values, replicated these findings. A meta-analysis of correlations across studies corroborated the presence of positive links between CT beliefs, Collectivism, r = .31, 95%CI = [.15; 47] and Masculinity, r = .39, 95%CI = [.18; 59]. Our results suggest that in addition to individual-differences and contextual variables, cultural factors also play an important role in shaping CT beliefs., info:eu-repo/semantics/inPress
- Published
- 2021
4. Under the veil of tolerance: A justification-suppression approach to anti-Islamic implicit bias in reaction to terrorist attacks.
- Author
-
Arnoult M, Selimbegović L, Hirschberger G, Pyszczynski T, and Chatard A
- Subjects
- Humans, Bias, Implicit, Prejudice, Attitude, Islam, Terrorism psychology
- Abstract
Twenty years after 9/11, the impact of terrorism on social and political attitudes remains unclear. Several large-scale surveys suggest that terrorism has no discernible effects on direct, self-report measures of prejudice toward Arab-Muslims. However, direct measures may lack the sensitivity to detect subtle underlying attitudes that are considered socially unacceptable to openly express. To tap these subtle reactions, we assessed more sensitive and implicit measures of the cognitive-affective aspects of prejudice. Building on the justification-suppression model of prejudice, we hypothesized that terrorist attacks increase implicit bias toward Arab-Muslims, especially among individuals who are unable to regulate automatic hostile reactions due to personality or situational variables. Study 1, using data from Project Implicit ( N = 276,311), showed that terrorist attacks increased implicit bias but not expressed prejudice toward Arab-Muslims. Study 2, using data from Google Trends, showed that terrorist attacks increased anti-Islamic searches on the internet. Four studies that collected original data (total N = 851) showed that the effects of reminders of terrorism on anti-Islamic implicit bias are moderated by individual differences in prejudice and automaticity (Studies 3-4), by the strength of implicit Muslim-terrorist associations (Study 5), and by momentary self-control depletion (Study 6). Overall, the present research indicates that despite little evidence for elevated overt expression of prejudice against Arab-Muslims following terrorist attacks, terrorist attacks increase anti-Islamic implicit bias whenever individuals are unlikely to control automatic hostile reactions. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. The distinct associations of ingroup attachment and glorification with responses to the coronavirus pandemic: Evidence from a multilevel investigation in 21 countries.
- Author
-
McLamore Q, Syropoulos S, Leidner B, Hirschberger G, van Bezouw MJ, Rovenpor D, Paladino MP, Baumert A, Bilewicz M, Bilgen A, Chatard A, Chekroun P, Chinchilla J, Choi HS, Euh H, Gomez A, Kardos P, Khoo YH, Li M, Légal JB, Loughnan S, Mari S, Tan-Mansukhani R, Muldoon O, Noor M, Petrović N, Selvanathan HP, Uluğ ÖM, Wohl MJ, Yeung WLV, Young K, and Zein RA
- Subjects
- Humans, Communicable Disease Control, Government, Hygiene, Pandemics prevention & control, COVID-19
- Abstract
While public health crises such as the coronavirus pandemic transcend national borders, practical efforts to combat them are often instantiated at the national level. Thus, national group identities may play key roles in shaping compliance with and support for preventative measures (e.g., hygiene and lockdowns). Using data from 25,159 participants across representative samples from 21 nations, we investigated how different modalities of ingroup identification (attachment and glorification) are linked with reactions to the coronavirus pandemic (compliance and support for lockdown restrictions). We also examined the extent to which the associations of attachment and glorification with responses to the coronavirus pandemic are mediated through trust in information about the coronavirus pandemic from scientific and government sources. Multilevel models suggested that attachment, but not glorification, was associated with increased trust in science and compliance with federal COVID-19 guidelines. However, while both attachment and glorification were associated with trust in government and support for lockdown restrictions, glorification was more strongly associated with trust in government information than attachment. These results suggest that both attachment and glorification can be useful for promoting public health, although glorification's role, while potentially stronger, is restricted to pathways through trust in government information., (© 2022 British Psychological Society.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. From Threat to Challenge: Understanding the Impact of Historical Collective Trauma on Contemporary Intergroup Conflict.
- Author
-
Li M, Leidner B, Hirschberger G, and Park J
- Subjects
- Humans, Group Processes, Social Group, Individuality, Conflict, Psychological, Historical Trauma
- Abstract
Collective memories of trauma can have profound impact on the affected individuals and communities. In the context of intergroup conflict, in the present article, we propose a novel theoretical framework to understand the long-term impact of historical trauma on contemporary intergroup relations from both victim and perpetrator perspectives. Integrating past research on intergroup conflict and the biopsychosocial model of threat and challenge, we argue that people appraise their group's past victimization and perpetration differently, either as a threat or as a challenge. Shaped by contextual factors and individual differences, these differential appraisals will subsequently influence how group members respond to contemporary intergroup conflict, with both adaptive and maladaptive consequences. This model contributes to unifying the previous research that has shown diverse effects of historical trauma on present-day intergroup dynamics. We present preliminary empirical evidence in support of the framework and discuss its theoretical and practical implications.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. The intent and extent of collective threats: A data-driven conceptualization of collective threats and their relation to political preferences.
- Author
-
Kahn DT, Björklund F, and Hirschberger G
- Subjects
- Humans, Concept Formation, Politics
- Abstract
The purpose of the present article is to systematically investigate how people perceive collective threat and how such threat perceptions relate to political preferences. Existing threat taxonomies are mostly derived from top-down analyses and little attempt has been made to examine bottom-up how people spontaneously perceive threats. One area where this is of central importance is the relationship between political preferences and threat perception. Prevailing theories in social psychology primarily study security and stability threats and conclude that conservatives are more sensitive to threats than liberals. Other perspectives, however, have criticized this position and maintain that the relationship between threat and political preferences depends on how both constructs are defined. To resolve this issue, we carried out a systematic, data-driven investigation of how collective threats are perceived. In five preregistered, data-driven studies, carried out on representative cross-cultural samples (aggregate N = 24,341), we show that people tend to categorize collective threats along two dimensions-their intent (omission/commission) and extent (local/global). We show that whereas liberals are more concerned than conservatives by omission-based and global threats, conservatives are more concerned than liberals by commission-based and local threats. These results suggest that collective threat is a multidimensional construct and that political leftists and rightists do not necessarily differ in the extent to which they perceive threats, but rather in the way they prioritize different threats facing society. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Trust in scientific information mediates associations between conservatism and coronavirus responses in the U.S., but few other nations.
- Author
-
McLamore Q, Syropoulos S, Leidner B, Hirschberger G, Young K, Zein RA, Baumert A, Bilewicz M, Bilgen A, van Bezouw MJ, Chatard A, Chekroun P, Chinchilla J, Choi HS, Euh H, Gomez A, Kardos P, Khoo YH, Li M, Légal JB, Loughnan S, Mari S, Tan-Mansukhani R, Muldoon O, Noor M, Paladino MP, Petrović N, Selvanathan HP, Uluğ ÖM, Wohl MJ, Yeung WLV, and Burrows B
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Attitude, COVID-19 virology, Canada, Female, Health Behavior, Humans, Indonesia, Male, Middle Aged, Quarantine, SARS-CoV-2 isolation & purification, Surveys and Questionnaires, United States epidemiology, COVID-19 epidemiology, Politics, Trust
- Abstract
U.S.-based research suggests conservatism is linked with less concern about contracting coronavirus and less preventative behaviors to avoid infection. Here, we investigate whether these tendencies are partly attributable to distrust in scientific information, and evaluate whether they generalize outside the U.S., using public data and recruited representative samples across three studies (N
total = 34,710). In Studies 1 and 2, we examine these relationships in the U.S., yielding converging evidence for a sequential indirect effect of conservatism on compliance through scientific (dis)trust and infection concern. In Study 3, we compare these relationships across 19 distinct countries. Although the relationships between trust in scientific information about the coronavirus, concern about coronavirus infection, and compliance are consistent cross-nationally, the relationships between conservatism and trust in scientific information are not. These relationships are strongest in North America. Consequently, the indirect effects observed in Studies 1-2 only replicate in North America (the U.S. and Canada) and in Indonesia. Study 3 also found parallel direct and indirect effects on support for lockdown restrictions. These associations suggest not only that relationships between conservatism and compliance are not universal, but localized to particular countries where conservatism is more strongly related to trust in scientific information about the coronavirus pandemic., (© 2022. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Conspiracy mentality and political orientation across 26 countries.
- Author
-
Imhoff R, Zimmer F, Klein O, António JHC, Babinska M, Bangerter A, Bilewicz M, Blanuša N, Bovan K, Bužarovska R, Cichocka A, Delouvée S, Douglas KM, Dyrendal A, Etienne T, Gjoneska B, Graf S, Gualda E, Hirschberger G, Kende A, Kutiyski Y, Krekó P, Krouwel A, Mari S, Đorđević JM, Panasiti MS, Pantazi M, Petkovski L, Porciello G, Rabelo A, Radu RN, Sava FA, Schepisi M, Sutton RM, Swami V, Thórisdóttir H, Turjačanin V, Wagner-Egger P, Žeželj I, and van Prooijen JW
- Abstract
People differ in their general tendency to endorse conspiracy theories (that is, conspiracy mentality). Previous research yielded inconsistent findings on the relationship between conspiracy mentality and political orientation, showing a greater conspiracy mentality either among the political right (a linear relation) or amongst both the left and right extremes (a curvilinear relation). We revisited this relationship across two studies spanning 26 countries (combined N = 104,253) and found overall evidence for both linear and quadratic relations, albeit small and heterogeneous across countries. We also observed stronger support for conspiracy mentality among voters of opposition parties (that is, those deprived of political control). Nonetheless, the quadratic effect of political orientation remained significant when adjusting for political control deprivation. We conclude that conspiracy mentality is associated with extreme left- and especially extreme right-wing beliefs, and that this non-linear relation may be strengthened by, but is not reducible to, deprivation of political control., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Strong hearts, open minds: Cardiovascular challenge predicts non-defensive responses to ingroup-perpetrated violence.
- Author
-
McLamore Q, Leidner B, Park J, Hirschberger G, Li M, Reinhard D, and Beals K
- Subjects
- Australia, Humans, Iran, Violence, Motivation, Social Identification
- Abstract
Reminders of ingroup-perpetrated violence represent a psychological stressor that some people respond to defensively (e.g., justifying the violence), while others react non-defensively (e.g., accepting collective responsibility). To explain these divergent responses, we applied the biopsychosocial model of challenge and threat to the context of intergroup conflict. Participants (N = 130) read about either an ingroup (American) or outgroup (Australian) soldier torturing an Iranian captive. We recorded cardiovascular responses while participants video-recorded introductions to an Iranian confederate who they believed they would meet. In the ingroup (but not the outgroup) condition, cardiovascular responses of challenge (relative to threat) were associated with less psychological defensiveness of ingroup-perpetrated violence and greater support for diplomacy towards its victims. Self-reported challenge/threat appraisals demonstrated no such relationships. These findings suggest that motivational states of challenge and threat can differentiate defensive and non-defensive responses, and that these motivational states may be better captured with physiological rather than self-report measures., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. The link between attachment orientations and cellular aging among former prisoners of war.
- Author
-
Ein-Dor T, Hirschberger G, Tsur N, Mikulincer M, Bazak SB, and Solomon Z
- Subjects
- Aged, Anxiety epidemiology, Anxiety psychology, Female, Humans, Israel epidemiology, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Psychological Trauma epidemiology, Psychological Trauma psychology, Socioeconomic Factors, Spouses psychology, Telomere metabolism, Anxiety physiopathology, Cellular Senescence physiology, Object Attachment, Prisoners of War psychology, Psychological Trauma physiopathology
- Abstract
Objective : Ex-prisoners of war (ex-POWs) experience prolonged distress that in some cases may influence their cellular aging (telomere length). The current research examines whether attachment orientations of ex-POWs and their spouses can explain individual differences in telomere length 40 years after the experience of captivity. Methods : Eighty-eight Israeli ex-POWs were assessed at four time points since captivity, whereas their spouses at three time points. Attachment orientations (anxiety, avoidance) were assessed in three time points and telomere length was measured at time four. Results : Findings indicated that ex-POWs' attachment avoidance was associated with shorter telomere length. In addition, spouses' attachment anxiety was associated with shorter telomere length among ex-POWs, whereas spouses' attachment avoidance was unexpectedly related to longer telomere length among ex-POWs. Conclusions : Results suggest that the effects of trauma on cellular aging are not uniform and that intrapersonal and interpersonal variables may moderate responses to trauma at the cellular level.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. To die for a cause but not for a companion: Attachment-related variations in the terror management function of self-sacrifice.
- Author
-
Caspi-Berkowitz N, Mikulincer M, Hirschberger G, Ein-Dor T, and Shaver PR
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Israel, Male, Young Adult, Attitude to Death, Fear psychology, Object Attachment
- Abstract
In 8 studies, we examined the terror management function of self-sacrifice and the moderating role of attachment orientations. Studies 1-5 focused on readiness to self-sacrifice for a cause, whereas Studies 6-8 focused on self-sacrifice to save a relationship partner's life. In Studies 1-3 and 6, we examined whether mortality salience increases readiness to self-sacrifice. In Studies 4-5 and 7-8, we examined the defensive nature and anxiety-buffering role of self-sacrifice-that is, whether providing another terror management defense reduces the readiness to self-sacrifice following mortality salience and whether thoughts about self-sacrifice mitigate death-thought accessibility. Findings indicated that self-sacrifice for a cause served a terror management function mainly among attachment-anxious participants, whereas self-sacrifice for a relationship partner served this defensive function mainly among participants scoring low on avoidant attachment. Attachment-avoidant participants reacted to mortality salience with reluctance to self-sacrifice for another person. Discussion focuses on attachment orientation as a basis for using self-sacrifice as an existential defense. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Early Environments Shape Neuropeptide Function: The Case of Oxytocin and Vasopressin.
- Author
-
Perry-Paldi A, Hirschberger G, Feldman R, Zagoory-Sharon O, Buchris Bazak S, and Ein-Dor T
- Abstract
Oxytocin (OT) and vasopressin (AVP) are neuropeptides that govern the social-emotional functioning of humans. We contend that to fully understand their function, research should consider how they are flexibly fitted to maximize survival and reproduction given the variety of human experience. In a series of two studies, we show that early life stress is associated with change in the core function of OT and AVP in evolutionary predictable ways: Under high early life stress, AVP promotes threat-detection capabilities, whereas OT motivates non-selective proximity seeking to others. Conversely, under low early life stress these neuropeptides have an opposite, yet adaptive response: AVP promotes low vigilance and preservation of energy, whereas OT increases detection of interpersonal flaws. Our results demonstrate the plasticity of neuropeptide functioning that mirrors the variance in human social-emotional functioning.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Collective Trauma and the Social Construction of Meaning.
- Author
-
Hirschberger G
- Abstract
Collective trauma is a cataclysmic event that shatters the basic fabric of society. Aside from the horrific loss of life, collective trauma is also a crisis of meaning. The current paper systematically delineates the process that begins with a collective trauma, transforms into a collective memory, and culminates in a system of meaning that allows groups to redefine who they are and where they are going. For victims, the memory of trauma may be adaptive for group survival, but also elevates existential threat, which prompts a search for meaning, and the construction of a trans -generational collective self. For perpetrators, the memory of trauma poses a threat to collective identity that may be addressed by denying history, minimizing culpability for wrongdoing, transforming the memory of the event, closing the door on history, or accepting responsibility. The acknowledgment of responsibility often comes with disidentification from the group. The dissonance between historical crimes and the need to uphold a positive image of the group may be resolved, however, in another manner; it may prompt the creation of a new group narrative that acknowledges the crime and uses it as a backdrop to accentuate the current positive actions of the group. For both victims and perpetrators, deriving meaning from trauma is an ongoing process that is continuously negotiated within groups and between groups; it is responsible for debates over memory, but also holds the promise of providing a basis for intergroup understanding.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Mortality salience reduces tactile attention among people with low body esteem.
- Author
-
Beyrak-Lev J, Gerber Z, Ein-Dor T, and Hirschberger G
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Young Adult, Attention physiology, Attitude to Death, Body Image psychology, Touch Perception physiology, Visual Perception physiology
- Abstract
Death awareness leads to aversion from bodily processes such as breastfeeding and sex, especially among low body esteem individuals. Using a modality bias task, we examined whether primes of death reduced attention to bodily sensations. We subliminally primed 72 undergraduates with either the word death or failed and assessed their attention to tactile and visual stimuli as a function of their body esteem. Results indicated that death primes significantly reduced attention to tactile stimuli relative to visual stimuli in low body esteem individuals. Dissociation from the body, therefore, may be an unconscious terror management strategy utilized by people with low body esteem.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Effective Disengagement: Insecure People Are More Likely to Disengage From an Ongoing Task and Take Effective Action When Facing Danger.
- Author
-
Ein-Dor T, Perry-Paldi A, Merrin J, Efrati Y, and Hirschberger G
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Attention, Avoidance Learning, Female, Humans, Israel, Male, Middle Aged, Motivation, Psychological Theory, Self Report, Survival psychology, Young Adult, Anxiety psychology, Dangerous Behavior, Defense Mechanisms, Fear, Object Attachment, Social Behavior
- Abstract
Objective: People believe that they can respond effectively to threats, but actually they experience difficulties in disengaging from ongoing tasks and shifting their attention to life-threatening events. We contend that this tendency is especially true for secure people with respect to their worldview and perception of others and not for insecure individuals., Method: In Study 1 (N = 290), we examined individuals' reactions to various threat scenarios. In Study 2 (N = 65), we examined these reactions using a behavioral design high in ecological validity. In Study 3 (N = 78), we examined group-level benefits for the actions of insecure individuals by manipulating asocial behavior in response to an emergency., Results: Study 1 indicated that anxiously attached individuals stayed away from threats and sought help; avoidant people tended to take action by either assessing the risk of the event and/or enacting an asocial action such as fight or flight. Study 2 added ecological validity to these findings, and Study 3 showed that priming asocial behavior responses promoted actions that increased group members' chances of survival., Conclusion: Results validate the central tenets of social defense theory and indicate that actions that are deemed asocial may paradoxically promote the survival of individuals and groups., (© 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. The Existential Underpinnings of Intergroup Helping: When Normative and Defensive Motivations Collide.
- Author
-
Hirschberger G, Hayes J, Shtrul A, and Ein-Dor T
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Attitude to Death, Female, Group Processes, Humans, Male, Social Responsibility, Young Adult, Existentialism, Helping Behavior, Morals, Motivation, Social Norms
- Abstract
Five studies examined defensive intergroup helping-when responsibility for an out-group victim's injury decreases helping, whereas lack of responsibility increases helping when death is salient. In Study 1 ( N = 350), implicit death primes increased petition signings to allow a Palestinian child to receive medical treatment in Israel, when the child was a victim of Palestinian fire. When the child was a victim of Israeli fire, however, death primes decreased petition signings. Study 2 ( N = 200) partially replicated these effects on commitment to donate blood to an injured Palestinian child. Study 3 ( N = 162) found that moral affirmation primes moderate defensive helping effects. Study 4 ( N = 372) replicated defensive helping, but failed to replicate the moral affirmation effect found in Study 3. Study 5 ( N = 243) partially replicated defensive helping and found that different framings of existential threat moderate the effect. Overall, results indicate that self-protective concerns underlie prosocial responses to out-group members in need.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. How Is Existential Threat Related to Intergroup Conflict? Introducing the Multidimensional Existential Threat (MET) Model.
- Author
-
Hirschberger G, Ein-Dor T, Leidner B, and Saguy T
- Abstract
Existential threat lies at the heart of intergroup conflict, but the literature on existential concerns lacks clear conceptualization and integration. To address this problem, we offer a new conceptualization and measurement of existential threat. We establish the reliability and validity of our measure, and to illustrate its utility, we examine whether different existential threats underlie the association between political ideology and support for specific political policies. Study 1 ( N = 798) established the construct validity of the scale, and revealed four distinct existential threats: personal death (PD), physical collective annihilation (PA), symbolic collective annihilation (SA), and past victimization (PV). Study 2 ( N = 424) confirmed the 4-factor structure, and the convergent and discriminant validity of the scale. Study 3 ( N = 170) revealed that the association between a hawkish political ideology and support for hardline policies was mediated by PV, whereas the association between a dovish political ideology and conciliatory policies was mediated by concerns over collective symbolic annihilation. Study 4 ( N = 503) conceptually replicated the pattern of findings found in Study 3, and showed that at times of conflict, PA concerns also mediate the relationship between hawkish ideologies and support for hardline policies. In both Studies 3 and 4, when controlling for other threats, PD did not play a significant role. These results underscore the need to consider the multidimensional nature of existential threat, especially in the context of political conflict.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Why does Existential Threat Promote Intergroup Violence? Examining the Role of Retributive Justice and Cost-Benefit Utility Motivations.
- Author
-
Hirschberger G, Pyszczynski T, and Ein-Dor T
- Abstract
The current research examined the role of retributive justice and cost-benefit utility motivations in the process through which mortality salience increases support for violent responses to intergroup conflict. Specifically, previous research has shown that mortality salience often encourages political violence, especially when perceptions of retributive justice are activated. The current research examined whether mortality salience directly activates a justice mindset over a cost-benefit utility mindset, and whether this justice mindset is associated with support for political violence. In Study 1 (N = 209), mortality salience was manipulated among Israeli participants who then read about a Hamas attack on Israel with either no casualties or many casualties, after which justice and utility motivations for retribution were assessed. Study 2 (N = 112), examined whether the link between death primes and support for an Israeli preemptive strike on Iran's nuclear facilities is mediated by justice or cost-benefit utility considerations. Results of both studies revealed that primes of death increased justice-related motivations, and these motives, rather than utility motives, were associated with support for violence. Findings suggest that existential concerns often fuel violent intergroup conflict because they increase desire for retributive justice, rather than increase belief that violence is an effective strategy. These findings expand our knowledge on the motivations for intergroup violence, and shed experimental light on real-life eruptions of violent conflict indicating that when existential concerns are salient, as they often are during violent conflict, the decision to engage in violence often disregards the utility of violence, and leads to the preference for violent solutions to political problems - even when these solutions make little practical sense.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Virtual peacemakers: mimicry increases empathy in simulated contact with virtual outgroup members.
- Author
-
Hasler BS, Hirschberger G, Shani-Sherman T, and Friedman DA
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Nonverbal Communication, Racism psychology, Students psychology, Young Adult, Arabs psychology, Computer Simulation, Empathy, Imitative Behavior, Jews psychology, Negotiating psychology, Psychological Distance, Social Identification, User-Computer Interface
- Abstract
This research examined virtual-human interactions as a new form of simulated contact between members of groups in conflict. A virtual human representing an outgroup member (a Palestinian) interacted with 60 Jewish Israeli participants in an experimental study. We manipulated postural mimicry by the virtual interaction partner during a conversation about a sensitive conflict issue. Mimicry increased empathy toward the Palestinians, irrespective of participants' feelings toward the Palestinians prior to the experiment. Further, mimicked participants who reported a priori negative feelings toward Palestinians expressed more sympathy toward their Palestinian virtual interaction partner, rated themselves as closer to him, and perceived the interaction as more harmonious compared to participants in a counter-mimicry condition. The results underscore the impact of mimicry on intergroup interactions, especially on individuals who harbor negative feelings toward the outgroup. The use of virtual-human interactions in obtaining this effect reveals the still widely unexplored potential of technology-enhanced conflict resolution.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Implicit death primes increase alcohol consumption.
- Author
-
Ein-Dor T, Hirschberger G, Perry A, Levin N, Cohen R, Horesh H, and Rothschild E
- Subjects
- Adult, Alcoholic Beverages statistics & numerical data, Beverages statistics & numerical data, Commerce statistics & numerical data, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Students psychology, Students statistics & numerical data, Young Adult, Alcohol Drinking epidemiology, Alcohol Drinking psychology, Attitude to Death
- Abstract
Objective: The authors examined whether priming thoughts of death are associated with increases in alcohol consumption., Method: Research assistants handed out fliers that were stacked in a random order to pedestrians walking through campus (N = 377). These fliers served to remind them of either their death or of an aversive condition unrelated to death (severe back pain), which served as the control. Then they were solicited to purchase an alcoholic or nonalcoholic beverage., Results: The authors used a 2 × 2 log-linear analysis, with type of prime (death-pain) and beverage type (alcoholic-nonalcoholic) as the independent variables and consumption (yes-no) as the outcome measure (11.9% of the total sample consumed a beverage). RESULTS revealed that a greater percentage of students who received the death prime consumed alcohol (36.59%) versus students in the pain prime condition (8.94%), G²(4, N = 377) = 64.8, p < .001, W = .41. The type of prime (death-pain) did not influence the consumption of nonalcoholic beverages., Conclusion: The current research indicates that death-related concerns may play a role in increasing the consumption of alcoholic beverages.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. On death and fear: a personal reflection on the value of social psychology research to the practice of oncologists.
- Author
-
Shai A and Hirschberger G
- Subjects
- Adult, Breast Neoplasms psychology, Breast Neoplasms therapy, Female, Humans, Terminally Ill, Adaptation, Psychological, Behavioral Research, Death, Fear psychology, Medical Oncology, Physician-Patient Relations, Physicians psychology, Psychology, Social
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Infant reminders alter sympathetic reactivity and reduce couple hostility at the transition to parenthood.
- Author
-
Mosek-Eilon V, Hirschberger G, Kanat-Maymon Y, and Feldman R
- Subjects
- Adult, Communication, Female, Humans, Infant, Male, Marriage psychology, Parent-Child Relations, Family Conflict psychology, Hostility, Parenting psychology, Parents psychology, Spouses psychology
- Abstract
The transition to parenthood marks an important developmental stage in adult life, associated with unique challenges to the partners' conflict dialogue in the formation of the family unit. Utilizing a biobehavioral experimental design, we examined the potential positive effects of the infant on the couple's conflict discussion. One hundred forty new parents of 6-month-old infants engaged in a face-to-face marital conflict discussion, while sympathetic reactivity was recorded online from mother and father and conflict interaction was microcoded for hostility and empathy. In the experimental group, a picture of one's own infant appeared on a screen halfway into the interaction, whereas controls viewed an affectively neutral stimulus. Infant reminders decreased mothers' sympathetic arousal, whereas fathers reacted with sympathetic vigilance by preserving sympathetic arousal. For both parents, infant reminders decreased couple hostility in parent-specific ways. Results accord with life-span developmental perspectives, support evolutionary models of mothering and fathering, and suggest that infants may enhance the quality of marital dialogue during this stressful transition.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. An experimental study of emotion regulation during relationship conflict interactions: the moderating role of attachment orientations.
- Author
-
Ben-Naim S, Hirschberger G, Ein-Dor T, and Mikulincer M
- Subjects
- Adult, Electrocardiography, Female, Galvanic Skin Response physiology, Humans, Israel, Male, Young Adult, Conflict, Psychological, Emotions physiology, Interpersonal Relations, Object Attachment, Sexual Partners psychology
- Abstract
Romantic couples (N = 127) engaged in a relationship conflict interaction during which their autonomic physiology, emotional experience, and emotional behavior were recorded. Couples were assigned randomly to one of two interventions, or to a control condition: In the affective suppression condition, one partner was instructed to refrain from expressing emotions. In the positive mindset condition, one partner was instructed to think about the positive aspects of the relationship. Results revealed that emotion regulation interventions influenced the physiology, emotional behavior, and emotional experience of both the manipulated person and his or her partner, who was oblivious to regulation manipulations. Specifically, suppression increased, and positive mindset decreased cardiovascular arousal and negative affect. These effects were generally exacerbated among those high on attachment anxiety and attenuated among those high on attachment avoidance. The results of this research corroborate and extend the Temporal Interpersonal Emotion Systems model (Butler, 2011) in the context of relationship conflict interactions.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Sensitivity to fairness and intentions of others in the ultimatum game in patients with ventromedial prefontal lesions.
- Author
-
Shamay-Tsoory SG, Suleiman R, Aharon-Peretz J, Gohary R, and Hirschberger G
- Subjects
- Adult, Analysis of Variance, Choice Behavior physiology, Female, Games, Experimental, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Neuropsychological Tests, Young Adult, Brain Injuries complications, Brain Injuries pathology, Brain Injuries psychology, Cognition Disorders etiology, Decision Making physiology, Intention, Prefrontal Cortex pathology, Risk-Taking
- Abstract
This study aimed to examine the relationship between perspective-taking and impaired decision-making in patients with ventromedial prefrontal (VM) lesions, using the Ultimatum Game (UG). In the UG, two players split a sum of money and one player proposes a division while the other can accept or reject this. Eight patients with VM damage and 18 healthy controls participated as responders in a modified version of the UG, in which identical offers can generate different rejection rates depending on the other offers available to the proposer. Participants had to either accept or reject offers of 2:8 NIS (2NIS for them and 8 NIS for the proposer), which were paired with one of four different possible offers (5:5, 4:6, 2:8, 8:2). Results indicate that the controls more often rejected offers of 2:8 when the alternative was 4:6 (a greedy alternative) than when the alternative was 5:5 (fair alternative), whereas the VM patients showed the opposite pattern of decision-making. Additionally, the overall rejection rates were higher in patients as compared to controls. Furthermore, scores on a perspective-taking scale were negatively correlated with rejection rates in the patient group, suggesting that perspective-taking deficits may account for impaired decision-making in VM patients.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. We can work it out: age differences in relational pronouns, physiology, and behavior in marital conflict.
- Author
-
Seider BH, Hirschberger G, Nelson KL, and Levenson RW
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Emotions physiology, Female, Galvanic Skin Response physiology, Heart Rate physiology, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Middle Aged, Personality Inventory, Psychophysiology, Sex Factors, Aging physiology, Aging psychology, Arousal physiology, Family Conflict psychology, Semantics, Verbal Behavior physiology
- Abstract
This study examined the relationship that personal pronouns spoken during a marital conversation have with the emotional qualities of those interactions and with marital satisfaction. Middle-aged and older couples (N = 154) engaged in a 15-min conflict conversation during which physiology and emotional behavior were continuously monitored. Verbatim transcripts of the conversations were coded into 2 lexical categories: (a) we-ness (we-words), pronouns that focus on the couple; (b) separateness (me/you-words), pronouns that focus on the individual spouses. Analyses revealed that greater we-ness was associated with a number of desirable qualities of the interaction (lower cardiovascular arousal, more positive and less negative emotional behavior), whereas greater separateness was associated with a less desirable profile (more negative emotional behavior, lower marital satisfaction). In terms of age differences, older couples used more we-ness words than did middle-aged couples. Further, the associations between separateness and marital satisfaction were strongest for older wives. These findings indicate that the emotional aspects of marital quality are expressed in the natural language of couples engaged in conversation., ((c) 2009 APA, all rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Attachment, Marital Satisfaction, and Divorce During the First Fifteen Years of Parenthood.
- Author
-
Hirschberger G, Srivastava S, Marsh P, Cowan CP, and Cowan PA
- Abstract
This study examines two overlapping longitudinal samples of U.S. couples with children, covering a period of 15 years after the first child's birth. The first sample extended from the pregnancy with a first child until that child was 5.5 years old; the second from ages 4.5 to 14.5. Growth curve analyses revealed that marital satisfaction declined over 15 years for both husbands and wives. Attachment security measured in the second sample was associated with greater marital satisfaction, but did not buffer against declines in marital satisfaction over time. Husbands' lower initial level of marital satisfaction measured around the first child's transition to school was the only significant predictor of marital dissolution. The discussion emphasizes theoretical and practical implications of these findings.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Vulnerability and vigilance: threat awareness and perceived adversary intent moderate the impact of mortality salience on intergroup violence.
- Author
-
Hirschberger G, Pyszczynski T, and Ein-Dor T
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Fear, Female, Humans, Iran, Israel, Male, Middle Aged, Nuclear Warfare psychology, Pain psychology, Social Identification, Social Perception, Young Adult, Arousal, Attitude to Death, Awareness, Intention, Islam psychology, Jews psychology, Politics, Race Relations, Terrorism psychology, Violence psychology
- Abstract
Three studies examined whether perceived adversary intent and personal vulnerability moderate the effects of mortality salience (MS) on violent solutions to conflict. In Study 1, following MS, Israeli participants read a description of de-escalating or escalating Iranian rhetoric. In Study 2, following MS, Israeli participants read about tensions with Iran and reflected on the personal ramifications of the conflict or on the content of the passage. In Study 3, Israeli participants with direct war exposure were compared to participants with no war exposure, and following MS, read a description of escalating or de-escalating Hezbollah rhetoric. Results revealed that MS increased support of violence under escalating conditions and low perceived vulnerability. However, for persons with direct war exposure, MS induced support of violence contingent on adversary rhetoric. Thus, direct experience with war leads to a more nuanced contingent response to existential threat not present among those without direct war experience.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. The self-protective altruist: terror management and the ambivalent nature of prosocial behavior.
- Author
-
Hirschberger G, Ein-Dor T, and Almakias S
- Subjects
- Adult, Back Pain psychology, Charities, Empathy, Female, Helping Behavior, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Motivation, Personality Inventory, Tissue and Organ Procurement, Altruism, Attitude to Death, Defense Mechanisms, Fear, Social Behavior
- Abstract
Three studies examined the hypothesis that mortality salience (MS) will increase prosocial behaviors when the prosocial cause promotes terror management processes. However, when the prosocial cause interferes with these processes, MS will reduce prosocial behavior. In Study 1, following a MS procedure, participants indicated their willingness to donate money to charity or to donate to an organ donation organization. In Study 2, a research assistant randomly distributed fliers with reminders of death or back pain, and another research assistant solicited participants' assistance from either a charitable fund booth or an organ donation booth. Study 3 examined the impact of MS on helping a wheelchair-bound confederate or a walking confederate. The results indicated that MS increased charitable donations and increased help to a walking confederate. However, MS significantly decreased organ donation card signings and decreased help to a wheelchair-bound confederate. The discussion examines the tension between personal fear and worldview validation.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Terror management and attributions of blame to innocent victims: reconciling compassionate and defensive responses.
- Author
-
Hirschberger G
- Subjects
- Adaptation, Psychological physiology, Adolescent, Adult, Analysis of Variance, Denial, Psychological, Dental Anxiety psychology, Disabled Persons statistics & numerical data, Female, Humans, Judgment physiology, Male, Middle Aged, Motivation, Severity of Illness Index, Students psychology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Attitude to Death, Defense Mechanisms, Disabled Persons psychology, Empathy, Fear psychology, Guilt
- Abstract
In this article, 4 studies test the hypothesis that reminders of personal death bias the normative attribution process and increase the motivation to blame severely injured, innocent victims. In Studies 1 and 2, primes of death led to greater attributions of blame to severely injured victims but did not significantly influence attributions of blame to either mildly injured victims or negatively portrayed others. In Study 3, primes of death led to greater attributions of blame to victims of circumstance but did not influence attributions of blame to victims who were explicitly responsible for their condition. In Study 4, innocent victims who were severely injured elicited more death-related cognitions than did victims who were responsible for their condition or who were only mildly injured. These findings indicate that the predictions of normative models of attribution may be moderated, and even overturned, when observers are reminded of their personal death such that defensive needs override rational inferential processes.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Defenders of a lost cause: terror management and violent resistance to the disengagement plan.
- Author
-
Hirschberger G and Ein-Dor T
- Subjects
- Adaptation, Psychological, Adolescent, Adult, Attitude to Death, Culture, Female, Humans, Israel, Male, Middle East, Social Identification, Warfare, Denial, Psychological, Jews psychology, Politics, Religion and Psychology, Social Justice, Students psychology, Terrorism psychology, Violence psychology
- Abstract
Two studies, conducted 3 months before the Israeli pullout from the Gaza Strip and the Northern West Bank, examined whether reminders of death would lead right-wing Israelis to endorse violent resistance against the disengagement plan. More specifically, we hypothesized that this reaction would be particularly strong among participants high in denial--those who were unable to come to terms with the Israeli withdrawal. In Study 1 (N = 63), right-wing Israeli undergraduates were primed with death and asked to indicate whether they view violent resistance as legitimate and whether they would be willing to partake in such violence. In Study 2 (N = 42), Israeli settlers in the Gaza Strip completed a similar procedure as in Study 1. In both studies, primes of death led to greater support of violent resistance, but only among participants high in denial. The discussion examines the applicability of terror management theory to understanding real-life political crises.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Long-term mental health of women after a first acute myocardial infarction.
- Author
-
Drory Y, Kravetz S, and Hirschberger G
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Middle Aged, Myocardial Infarction complications, Myocardial Infarction rehabilitation, Regression Analysis, Social Support, Stress, Psychological epidemiology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Time Factors, Adaptation, Psychological, Mental Health, Myocardial Infarction psychology, Stress, Psychological etiology
- Abstract
Objectives: To compare the long-term psychologic well-being and psychologic distress, after a first acute myocardial infarction (AMI), of women with those of men and those of a normative community sample of women and to examine the relation of sociodemographic, medical, and psychologic variables to the long-term psychologic well-being and psychologic distress of women., Design: Longitudinal study., Setting: Eight medical centers in central Israel., Participants: Sixty-two women (age range, 30-65y) with documented first AMI., Interventions: Sociodemographic, medical, and psychologic data were collected before hospital discharge (T1). Psychologic well-being and psychologic distress were assessed 5 years after AMI (T2) with the Mental Health Inventory., Main Outcome Measures: Hierarchical regression was used to examine the relations among the outcome variables, psychologic well-being, and psychologic distress at T2 and the predictors, sociodemographic, medical, and psychologic variables at T1., Results: Women had less long-term psychologic well-being and more psychologic distress after AMI than did men or the normative sample of women. Depression and concomitant medical problems were related to women's psychologic well-being; depression alone was related to their long-term psychologic distress., Conclusions: Women with an AMI are more likely than men to have reduced psychologic well-being and increased psychologic distress. In addition, diminished mental health was related to medical and psychologic pathogenic factors.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. The existential function of close relationships: introducing death into the science of love.
- Author
-
Mikulincer M, Florian V, and Hirschberger G
- Subjects
- Adaptation, Psychological, Culture, Humans, Object Attachment, Terrorism psychology, Death, Interpersonal Relations, Love, Social Behavior
- Abstract
Originally, terror management theory proposed two psychological mechanisms in dealing with the terror of death awareness-cultural worldview validation and self-esteem enhancement. In this article, we would like to promote the idea of close relationships as an additional death-anxiety buffering mechanism and review a growing body of empirical data that support this contention. Based on a comprehensive analysis of the sociocultural and personal functions of close relationships, we formulate two basic hypotheses that have received empirical support in a series of experimental studies. First, death reminders heighten the motivation to form and maintain close relationships. Second, the maintenance of close relationships provides a symbolic shield against the terror of death, whereas the breaking of close relationships results in an upsurge of death awareness. In addition, we present empirical evidence supporting the possibility that close relationships function as a related yet separate mechanism from the self-esteem and cultural worldview defenses.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. The anxiety-buffering function of close relationships: evidence that relationship commitment acts as a terror management mechanism.
- Author
-
Florian V, Mikulincer M, and Hirschberger G
- Subjects
- Adaptation, Psychological, Adult, Altruism, Anxiety prevention & control, Attitude to Death, Biological Evolution, Existentialism psychology, Female, Humans, Instinct, Love, Male, Marriage psychology, Models, Psychological, Motivation, Survival psychology, Death, Defense Mechanisms, Interpersonal Relations, Self Concept
- Abstract
Three studies examined the terror management function of romantic commitment. In Study 1 (N = 94), making mortality salient led to higher reports of romantic commitment on the Dimensions of Commitment Inventory (J. M. Adams & W. H. Jones, 1997) than control conditions. In Study 2 (N = 60), the contextual salience of thoughts about romantic commitment reduced the effects of mortality salience on judgments of social transgressions. In Study 3 (N = 100), the induction of thoughts about problems in romantic relationships led to higher accessibility of death-related thoughts than did the induction of thoughts about either academic problems or a neutral theme. The findings expand terror management theory, emphasizing the anxiety-buffering function of close relationships.
- Published
- 2002
35. Long-term mental health of men after a first acute myocardial infarction.
- Author
-
Drory Y, Kravetz S, and Hirschberger G
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Educational Status, Humans, Israel, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Middle Aged, Myocardial Infarction complications, Myocardial Infarction rehabilitation, Social Support, Surveys and Questionnaires, Time Factors, Mental Health, Myocardial Infarction psychology, Stress, Psychological etiology
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the differential and independent impact of sociodemographic, medical, and psychologic variables assessed at hospital discharge on patients' short- and long-term mental health., Design: Longitudinal study., Setting: Eight medical centers in central Israel., Participants: Male Israeli patients (N = 209; age range: 30-65 y) with documented first acute myocardial infarction (AMI)., Intervention: Subjects were interviewed 3 times, once (T1) before hospital discharge, a second time (T2) at 3 to 6 months after discharge, and a third time (T3) at 5 years post-AMI. Sociodemographic, medical, and psychologic data were elicited at the first interview and completed with medical information in the files. Psychologic well-being and psychologic distress were evaluated by the Mental Health Inventory at the second and third interviews. These 2 outcome variables were compared with normative community data on these aspects of mental health., Main Outcome Measures: Hierarchical regression was used to examine the relation between the independent variables, sociodemographic, medical, and psychologic variables, and the dependent variables, psychologic well-being and psychologic distress, at T2 and T3., Results: Depression, perceived health, sense of coherence, social support, and educational level at discharge predicted aspects of mental health 3 to 6 months and 5 years post-AMI. However, only psychologic distress differentiated between the research participants and the normative community sample of men., Conclusions: A first episode of AMI appears to increase psychologic distress more than it decreases psychologic well-being both 3 to 6 months and 5 years post-AMI. Educational level and sense of coherence may serve as protective factors, whereas depression may foster vulnerability to distress and impaired psychologic well-being., (Copyright 2002 by the American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine and the American Academy of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation)
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Gender differences in the willingness to engage in risky behavior: a terror management perspective.
- Author
-
Hirschberger G, Florian V, Mikulincer M, Goldenberg JL, and Pyszczynski T
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Israel, Male, United States, Attitude to Death, Existentialism psychology, Risk-Taking, Sex Factors
- Abstract
Two studies examined the effects of mortality salience inductions on men and women's willingness to engage in risk-taking behaviors. In Study 1, a sample of American college students (N= 101) were exposed to either a mortality salient or a control condition and then rated their willingness to engage in a variety of risk-taking activities. In Study 2, a sample of Israeli high-school students (N = 106) completed a self-esteem measure, were exposed to either a mortality salient or control condition, and then rated their willingness to use various psychoactive substances that were offered in three different hypothetical scenarios. In both studies, findings indicated that mortality salience led to higher willingness to engage in risky behaviors in men but not in women. Study 2 also revealed that self-esteem moderated the effect of mortality salience on the willingness to use psychoactive substances but only when they were offered by a friend. The discussion offers a terror management perspective of risk-taking behaviors.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Sexual activity of women and men one year before a first acute myocardial infarction.
- Author
-
Drory Y, Kravetz S, and Hirschberger G
- Subjects
- Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Multivariate Analysis, Retrospective Studies, Sex Factors, Myocardial Infarction psychology, Sexual Behavior
- Abstract
A decrease in sexual activity after an acute myocardial infarction (AMI) for both women and men has been reported with one study suggesting that this reduction in sexual activity may precede rather than proceed the AMI. The present study compared the sexual activity of women and men before AMI to the sexual activity of a normative community sample of women and men, to examine whether the above reduction in sexual activity is especially characteristic of women and men who later incur an AMI. This study also investigated the association between selected medical and sociodemographic variables and sexual inactivity of women and men before an AMI. During an interview before discharge,138 women and 760 men who were hospitalized due to a first AMI responded to a question regarding the frequency of their sexual activity 1 year before the AMI. Their sociodemographic and medical background was obtained from the interview and the medical charts. When compared to a normative sample, only women reported significantly less sexual activity during the year before their AMI. These women were also found to be at a disadvantage when compared to men on many of the sociodemographic and medical variables shown to contribute to sexual inactivity for both men and women. However, the higher percent of sexual inactivity for women during the year before AMI may not only be due to women's higher morbidity and lower sociodemographic status. Other variables not included in this study, but associated with gender, could account for this result., (Copyright 2002 S. Karger AG, Basel)
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. An existentialist view on mortality salience effects: personal hardiness, death-thought accessibility, and cultural worldview defence.
- Author
-
Florian V, Mikulincer M, and Hirschberger G
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Humans, Israel, Male, Projective Techniques, Social Perception, Attitude to Death, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Defense Mechanisms, Existentialism, Personality
- Abstract
Two studies examined the possible moderating role of hardiness on reactions to mortality salience inductions. A sample of 240 Israeli undergraduate students completed a hardiness scale, were exposed to a mortality salience or control induction, and then either rated the severity and punishment of 10 social transgressions (Study 1, N = 120) or performed a word-stem completion task, which tapped the accessibility of death-related thoughts (Study 2, N = 120). Results indicated that a mortality salience induction led to more severe judgments of social transgressions as well as to more severe punishments than a control induction only among participants scoring low in the hardiness scale. However, a mortality salience induction led to a higher cognitive accessibility of death-related thoughts than a control condition regardless of participants' hardiness scores. The discussion emphasizes the importance of considering inner resources when examining reactions to mortality reminders.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. The affective component of the secure base schema: affective priming with representations of attachment security.
- Author
-
Mikulincer M, Hirschberger G, Nachmias O, and Gillath O
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Israel, Judgment, Male, Perceptual Masking, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Affect, Cues, Object Attachment, Stress, Psychological, Subliminal Stimulation
- Abstract
Using an affective priming procedure (S. T. Murphy & R. B. Zajonc, 1993), 7 studies examined the effects of the contextual activation of representations of attachment security (secure base schema) on the evaluation of neutral stimuli under either neutral or stressful contexts. In all the studies, participants also reported on their attachment style. Results indicated that the subliminal priming of secure base representations led to more positive affective reactions to neutral stimuli than did the subliminal priming of neutral or no pictures under both neutral and stressful contexts. Although the subliminal priming of positively valued, attachment-unrelated representations heightened positive evaluations under neutral contexts, it failed to elicit positive affect under stressful contexts. The results also revealed interesting effects of attachment style. The discussion focuses on the affective component of the secure base schema.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.