photo credit: Coming for me next? Pierre J, CC
BY-NC-SA
I have personal interest in arachnophobia – the fear of
spiders – because I am a spider expert,
but also because my daughter has it.
She is not alone. According to the American Psychiatric Association, phobias
affect more than one in ten people in the US, and of those individuals,
up to
40% of phobias are related to bugs (including spiders), mice, snake and bats.
There are clearly a lot of arachnophobes. But do they
know why they fear spiders?
Can they do something to control those fears? Chris
Buddle
Once bitten twice shy?
Psychologists believe that one reason why people fear
spiders
is because of some direct experience with the arachnids instilled that
fear in them.
This is known as the “conditioning” view of arachnophobia.
In 1991, Graham Davey at City University London ran a study to understand more about this
view.
He interviewed 118 undergraduate students about their fears of spiders.
About 75% of the people sampled were either mildly or severely afraid of
spiders. Of those most were female. (This gender bias in arachnophobia has been
supported subsequent research.)
There was also an effect from family. Those people
fearful of spiders reported having
a family member with similar fears, but the
study was unable to separate genetic factors
from environmental ones.
What is surprising
is that Davey found that archanophobia wasn’t the result of specific “spider
trauma”, which means there was no support for the conditioning view.
So what makes spiders so terrifying? Surely it must be
the threat of being bitten?
Davey looked at that issue too. It turns out that
it is not so much a fear of being bitten,
but rather the seemingly erratic
movements of spiders, and their “legginess”.
Davey said: Animal fears may represent a functionally distinct set of
adaptive responses
which have been selected for during the evolutionary history
of the human species.
Graham Davey/Anxiety Research
A criticism of Davey’s work is that
perhaps “conditioning” cannot be so easily dismissed,
because the spider-trauma
event may have occurred during childhood, and a specific spider event may be
buried deep within memories.
In 1997, Peter Muris and his colleagues at the
University of Maastricht tried to looked into this.
Not surprisingly, if you give kids
a list of things that might be scary for them, the vast majority check off
things like not breathing, getting hit by a car, bombs, fire or burglars as
quite important. Interestingly, if you give them a free option to tell
researchers what sorts of things they fear the most, both boys and girls report
“spiders” as their top fear (the second fear is being kidnapped,
third is
predators and fourth is the dark).
This is surprising. Of all the
things kids might report, they list spiders as the number one fear.
So in
contrast to Davey’s work, Muris finds that the kids that were most fearful of
spiders could relate that fear to specific events. Perhaps conditioning is the
pathway to arachnophobia.
Genes or environment?
But before we can be sure that
conditioning is the main reason, we need to ensure that genetic factors are not
involved too. In 2003, John Hettema at the Virginia Institute for Psychiatric
and Behavioural Genetics and his colleagues conducted twin studies to tease
apart genetic factors.
Identical twins have identical DNA
but tend to live in different environments in adult life, which allows
researchers to find out how genes affect behaviour. When Hettema recorded the
responses of twins to “fear-relevant” images (spiders, snakes) compared to
“fear-irrelevant” images (circles, triangles). Statistical analysis of the
results revealed that genetic influences were “substantial”, which means that
arachnophobia is inheritable. You need not necessarily experience spiders to be
fearful of them.
Scare tactics
So, to my dissatisfaction, arachnophobia is here to stay.
But there may be a simple technique
to reduce the fear these bugs cause. In
2013, Paul Siegel at the State University of New York
and his colleague published
a study that helped volunteers lessen their arachnophobia.
They first split the volunteers into phobic and
non-phobic groups, based on simple spider-fear tests. After a week of doing
these tests, both the groups were then given exposed to images of flowers
or
spiders, but the exposure was for such a very short time.
The idea was that people can’t recognise the images
consciously, but it has an effect
on their subconscious. When the spider-fear
tests were carried out on both these groups again, those who feared spiders had
become less afraid.
While other general conclusions are hard to draw from the
literature on arachnophobia, arachnologists like me should rejoice at the
results of Hettema’s study.
If nothing else, at least sharing images of spiders
may help reduce arahnophobia.
Chris Buddle does not work for, consult to, own shares
in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from
this article, and has no relevant affiliations.
by
Taboola
Sponsored
Content
http://www.iflscience.com/brain/why-are-we-afraid-spiders
Actually, I've found spider phobia to be easy to work with whereas other phobias
have posed quite a challenge. The peacock spider is a magnificent specimen. M'reen
Perhaps you’d like to check out my sister blogs:
http://www.ourinnerminds.blogspot.com this takes advantage of the
experience and expertise of others.
www.turbochargedreading.blogspot.com describes the steps
to reading in the way your mind prefers.
www.happyartaccidents.blogspot.com just for
fun.
To quote the Dr Seuss himself, “The more that you read, the more
things you will know.
The more that you learn; the more places you'll go.”
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