Implicit and explicit attitudes toward spiders: Sensitivity to treatment and predictive value for generalization of treatment effects
April 2009
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This study tested whether high spider fearful individuals' implicit and explicit attitudes toward spiders are sensitive to exposure treatment, and whether post-treatment implicit and/or explicit attitudes are related to the generalization of treatment effects. Self-reported explicit and implicit attitudes (indexed with a pictorial Extrinsic Affective Simon Task) were assessed in high spider fearful, treatment-seeking individuals (n = 60) before and after a one-session exposure in vivo treatment and at 2-month follow-up. A group of non-fearful participants (n = 30) completed the same assessments once. Results show that implicit attitudes did not change following treatment over and above test-retest effects. In contrast, explicit attitudes did change favorably following treatment, but negative explicit attitudes at post-treatment were associated with less pronounced overt approach behavior at follow-up. These findings support the idea that residual negative explicit attitudes interfere with the generalization of treatment effects.
- adult
- article
- female
- human
- male
- major clinical study
- treatment outcome
- sensitivity analysis
- conditioning
- Treatment
- fear
- phobia
- questionnaire
- spider
- association
- Exposure in vivo
- Implicit attitudes
- Phobia
- Spider-fear
- attitude
- explicit attitude
- help seeking behavior
- implicit attitude
- task performance