100% de satisfacción garantizada Inmediatamente disponible después del pago Tanto en línea como en PDF No estas atado a nada 4,6 TrustPilot
logo-home
Resumen

Summary Definitions of abnormality Phobias

Puntuación
-
Vendido
-
Páginas
12
Subido en
23-10-2025
Escrito en
2024/2025

This document has helped me achieve the best grades needed in psychology. These grades can range from a grade B to an A* depending on your mode of revision. These notes contain everything you need to know in order to get within that grade boundary.

Mostrar más Leer menos
Institución
Grado









Ups! No podemos cargar tu documento ahora. Inténtalo de nuevo o contacta con soporte.

Escuela, estudio y materia

Nivel de Estudio
Editores
Tema
Curso

Información del documento

Subido en
23 de octubre de 2025
Número de páginas
12
Escrito en
2024/2025
Tipo
Resumen

Temas

Vista previa del contenido

1


Phobias
Specification
The behavioural, emotional and cognitive characteristics of phobias
The behavioural approach to explaining and treating phobias: the two-process
model, including classical and operant conditioning; systematic desensitisation,
including relaxation and use of hierarchy; flooding.

Characteristics of phobias
Behavioural

-Avoidance

When a person with a phobia is faced with the object or situation that creates fear,
the immediate response is to try to avoid it. For example, a person with a phobia of
spiders avoids being near them and a person with a phobia about social situations
avoids being in groups of people.

-Freeze or faint

However, there is also the opposite behavioural response, which is freeze or even
faint. Freezing is an adaptive response because a predator may think the prey is
dead.

-Disruption in functioning

Avoidance in the feared situation interferes significantly with the person’s normal
routine, occupation, social activities or relationships, and there is marked distress
about having the phobia. This distinguishes phobias from more everyday fears that
do not interfere with normal day-to-day living.

Emotional

-Fear

The primary emotional characteristic is fear that is marked and persistent, and is
likely to be excessive and unreasonable.

-Anxiety and panic

Coupled with fear are feelings of anxiety and panic.

-Excessive emotional response

These emotions are cued by the presence or anticipation of a specific object or
situation (e.g. spiders, flying, heights, seeing blood) and are out of proportion to
the actual danger posed.
Cognitive

, 2



-The irrational nature of the person’s thinking/resistance to rational
arguments.

For example, a person with a fear of flying is not helped by arguments that flying is
actually the safest form of transport.

-Self-realisation

A further defining characteristic is that the person recognises that their fear is
excessive or unreasonable, although this feature may be absent in children.

-Selective attention to the phobic stimulus.

If a sufferer can see the phobic stimulus, it is hard to look away from it. Keeping
our attention on something really dangerous is a good thing as it gives us the best
chance of reacting quickly to a threat, but this is not so useful when the fear is
irrational.


Behavioural explanation of phobias: the two-process model,
including classical and operant conditioning
The basic idea

Mowrer proposed the two-process model based on the behavioural approach to
phobias.

This states that phobias are acquired (learned in the first place) by classical
conditioning and then are maintained because of operant conditioning.
Process 1-Acquisition by classical conditioning

Classical conditioning involves learning to associate something of which we initially
have no fear (called a neutral stimulus) with something that already triggers a fear
response (known as an unconditioned stimulus). An individual would then have a
phobia of this neutral stimulus (it would become a conditioned stimulus).

For example, Watson and Rayner (1920) created a phobia in a 9-month old baby
called ‘Little Albert’. Whenever a rat was presented, they made a loud, frightening
noise by banging an iron bar close to Albert’s ear. This noise is an unconditioned
stimulus (UCS) which produces an unconditioned response (UCR) of fear.

When the rat (a neutral stimulus, NS i.e. one that Albert showed no response to)
and unconditioned stimulus are encountered close together in time, the NS
becomes associated with the UCS and both now produce a fear response-Albert
became frightened when he saw a rat.

The rat is now a learned or conditioned stimulus (CS) that produces a conditioned
response (CR).

This conditioning then generalised to similar objects. They tested Albert by
$15.51
Accede al documento completo:

100% de satisfacción garantizada
Inmediatamente disponible después del pago
Tanto en línea como en PDF
No estas atado a nada

Conoce al vendedor
Seller avatar
danielaspigule

Conoce al vendedor

Seller avatar
danielaspigule Albemarle Independent College
Seguir Necesitas iniciar sesión para seguir a otros usuarios o asignaturas
Vendido
0
Miembro desde
3 meses
Número de seguidores
0
Documentos
9
Última venta
-

0.0

0 reseñas

5
0
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0

Recientemente visto por ti

Por qué los estudiantes eligen Stuvia

Creado por compañeros estudiantes, verificado por reseñas

Calidad en la que puedes confiar: escrito por estudiantes que aprobaron y evaluado por otros que han usado estos resúmenes.

¿No estás satisfecho? Elige otro documento

¡No te preocupes! Puedes elegir directamente otro documento que se ajuste mejor a lo que buscas.

Paga como quieras, empieza a estudiar al instante

Sin suscripción, sin compromisos. Paga como estés acostumbrado con tarjeta de crédito y descarga tu documento PDF inmediatamente.

Student with book image

“Comprado, descargado y aprobado. Así de fácil puede ser.”

Alisha Student

Preguntas frecuentes