Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Jewish Business News

Psychology

Arachnophobes Overestimate Spider Sizes, Study

tarantula-Arachnophobes - SPIDER - ILLUSTRATION 71770_960_720

 

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev (BGU) researchers have discovered that arachnophobes overestimate spider size compared with other neutral animals that do not elicit fear, which could be useful in treating phobias.

The new study published in the journal, Biological Psychology, consisted of two experiments measuring attractiveness (valence) and the self-relevance role in neutral (birds, butterflies) vs. aversive (spiders) animal size estimation.

Please help us out :
Will you offer us a hand? Every gift, regardless of size, fuels our future.
Your critical contribution enables us to maintain our independence from shareholders or wealthy owners, allowing us to keep up reporting without bias. It means we can continue to make Jewish Business News available to everyone.
You can support us for as little as $1 via PayPal at [email protected].
Thank you.

“We found that although individuals with both high and low arachnophobia rated spiders as highly unpleasant, only the highly fearful participants overestimated the spider size, ” explains Dr. Tali Leibovich, a Ph.D. researcher at the BGU Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences and the Zlotowski Center for Neuroscience.

The research was born from a lab experience when Dr. Noga Cohen noticed a spider crawling and her spider-phobic colleague, Dr. Leibovich, asked her to get rid of it. Dr. Cohen could not understand why Dr. Leibovich was afraid and thought the spider was small, while Dr. Leibovich insisted the spider was large. “How could this be if we both saw the same spider?” asked Dr. Cohen.

In the study, the researchers had female BGU students complete a questionnaire that measured their fear of spiders and divided the participants into two groups: afraid and unafraid. The results of the first experiment demonstrated that although both groups rated the spider pictures as more unpleasant than the other pictures, only the highly fearful participants overestimated the size of spiders compared to butterflies.

Further experiments showed that size estimation was affected by both the level of unpleasantness and the great fear a participant had of spiders.

“This study revealed how perception of even a basic feature such as size is influenced by emotion, and demonstrates how each of us experiences the world in a unique and different way, ” says Dr. Leibovich.

“This study also raises more questions such as: Is it fear that triggers size disturbance, or maybe the size disturbance is what causes fear in the first place? Future studies that attempt to answer such questions can be used as a basis for developing treatments for different phobias.”

Newsletter



You May Also Like

World News

In the 15th Nov 2015 edition of Israel’s good news, the highlights include:   ·         A new Israeli treatment brings hope to relapsed leukemia...

Life-Style Health

Medint’s medical researchers provide data-driven insights to help patients make decisions; It is affordable- hundreds rather than thousands of dollars

Entertainment

The Movie The Professional is what made Natalie Portman a Lolita.

History & Archeology

A groundbreaking discovery in the Manot Cave in the Western Galilee, Israel has unearthed the earliest evidence in the Levant (and among the world's...