The Transmission of Fear Between Individuals Can Be Counteracted

Summary: According to a new study, the social transmission of fear can be prevented.

Source: Karolinska Institute.

The social transmission of fear, which can cause the development of phobias, can be prevented, according to a new study from Karolinska Institutet. The study, which is published in The Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, deepens our understanding of how best to develop practical strategies for preventing phobias and similar conditions in particularly vulnerable groups.

Throughout its evolution, mankind has benefited from the ability to learn about emotionally charged situations by observing how other individuals behave. The phenomenon is called social learning and can be an efficient means for individuals to avoid danger. Babies, for example, can learn appropriate behaviour by observing what adults do.

There is, however, a flipside to this. This kind of indirect experience can contribute to the transmission of fears and anxiety disorders between members of a family and people living in close proximity. Even though more is now understood about the mechanisms of social transmission for fear, researchers still know surprisingly little about the learning processes that counteract or reduce the transmission of fears between individuals.

Transmission of fear

In the present study, researchers at Karolinska Institutet found that the social transmission of fear can be counteracted. They had participants watch a video in which a “demonstrator” looked at images of two angry human faces. When one of the faces was shown, the demonstrator received an unpleasant electric shock to the wrist. In most cases, there was a transmission of fear from the demonstrator to the participants, who started to manifest fear reactions to the photograph that was associated with danger for the demonstrator.

Safe situation

The researchers then looked at what happened if the participants first saw a film of the demonstrator calmly looking at the same photographs, conveying that the situation was safe and the faces harmless, and found that it prevented the transmission of fear. However, if the participants were first shown a film of the same photographs but without the presence of the calming demonstrator, this effect was not achieved.

“We found that an earlier safe experience in the presence of another person counteracted the social transmission of fear,” says co-researcher Armita Golkar at Karolinska Institutet’s Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Division of Psychology.

Image shows a woman looking scared.
In the present study, researchers at Karolinska Institutet found that the social transmission of fear can be counteracted. NeuroscienceNews.com image is for illustrative purposes only.

In further experiments, the researchers observed that the effect remained when the circumstances changed, such as if the demonstrator was no longer present in a subsequent situation. In another version of the experiment, the “safe” and the “dangerous” demonstrators were different people, which cancelled the effect of safety learning.

“This study extends our understanding of the basic learning processes governing social transmission of fear and safety, and connects these lines of work to clinical research by examining how prior safe experiences can reduce the transmission of fears between individuals,” says the other co-researcher Andreas Olsson from the same department.

About this psychology research article

Funding: Funding information is not available.

Source: Karolinska Institute
Image Source: This NeuroscienceNews.com image is in the public domain.
Original Research: Abstract for “Immunization against social fear learning” by Armita Golkar and Andreas Olsson in Journal of Experimental Psychology. Published online April 14 2016 doi:10.1037/xge0000173

Cite This NeuroscienceNews.com Article

[cbtabs][cbtab title=”MLA”]Karolinska Institute. “The Transmission of Fear Between Individuals Can Be Counteracted.” NeuroscienceNews. NeuroscienceNews, 16 May 2016.
<https://neurosciencenews.com/fear-transmission-social-neuroscience-4246/>.[/cbtab][cbtab title=”APA”]Karolinska Institute. (2016, May 16). The Transmission of Fear Between Individuals Can Be Counteracted. NeuroscienceNews. Retrieved May 16, 2016 from https://neurosciencenews.com/fear-transmission-social-neuroscience-4246/[/cbtab][cbtab title=”Chicago”]Karolinska Institute. “The Transmission of Fear Between Individuals Can Be Counteracted.” NeuroscienceNews.
https://neurosciencenews.com/fear-transmission-social-neuroscience-4246/ (accessed May 16, 2016).[/cbtab][/cbtabs]


Abstract

Immunization against social fear learning

Social fear learning offers an efficient way to transmit information about potential threats; little is known, however, about the learning processes that counteract the social transmission of fear. In three separate experiments, we found that safety information transmitted from another individual (i.e., demonstrator) during preexposure prevented subsequent observational fear learning (Experiments 1–3), and this effect was maintained in a new context involving direct threat confrontation (Experiment 3). This protection from observational fear learning was specific to conditions in which information about both safety and danger was transmitted from the same demonstrator (Experiments 2–3) and was unaffected by increasing the number of the safety demonstrators (Experiment 3). Collectively, these findings demonstrate that observational preexposure can limit social transmission of fear. Future research is needed to better understand the conditions under which such effects generalize across individual demonstrators.

“Immunization against social fear learning” by Armita Golkar and Andreas Olsson in Journal of Experimental Psychology. Published online April 14 2016 doi:10.1037/xge0000173

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