Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 20 de 23
Filter
1.
J Marital Fam Ther ; 50(2): 328-347, 2024 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38361214

ABSTRACT

While hostile attributional bias (a tendency to interpret others' behaviors as intentionally hostile) is associated with negative outcomes in romantic relationships, no measure has been developed specifically for this context. Here, we describe the development and validation of a self-report questionnaire across three studies, named Hostile Attribution in Romantic Relationships Test. Study 1 introduces the development and preliminary validation (N = 152). Study 2 tests the validity and test-retest stability of the modified version revised based on findings in Study 1 (N = 151). Study 3 reports the translation and validation of a Chinese version (N = 630). The final 9-vignette scale is the first to specifically measure hostile attribution bias in romantic relationships, with good internal reliability, test-retest stability, and convergent validity. Factor analysis reveals a three-factor structure reflecting direct hostile attribution, indirect hostile attribution, and benign attribution to partners' behaviors. Implications regarding couple dynamics and clinical therapeutic interventions are discussed.


Subject(s)
Aggression , Hostility , Humans , Reproducibility of Results , Social Perception , Surveys and Questionnaires
2.
Pers Soc Psychol Bull ; 49(12): 1679-1694, 2023 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36062321

ABSTRACT

This is the first meta-analysis to synthesize the literature on insecure attachment and negative attribution bias (NAB) from both developmental and social/personality attachment traditions. This meta-analysis is important because extant studies report inconsistent associations, making it difficult to draw conclusions about the nature of these associations. Based on 41 samples (N = 8,727) from 32 articles, we specify and compare the effect sizes of these associations across studies. Results confirmed positive associations between NAB and anxious and avoidant attachment dimensions and an insecure composite, with a medium effect size. Correlations were moderated by age group, type of attachment measurement, and cultural background. Our findings advance knowledge and build on attachment and attribution theories, reconcile mixed findings, and inform the development of NAB interventions. Important gaps in the literature are revealed that will inspire future research.


Subject(s)
Anxiety , Social Perception , Humans , Adult , Child , Personality , Object Attachment , Culture
3.
Appetite ; 172: 105968, 2022 05 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35150794

ABSTRACT

Previous research has shown that "attachment anxiety" is a robust predictor of disinhibited eating behaviours and that this relationship is underpinned by difficulties in managing emotion. Night eating syndrome (NES), a proposed eating disorder characterized by evening hyperphagia, nocturnal awakenings to eat, and morning anorexia, is also associated with eating to manage emotion. Across two studies (N = 276 & N = 486), we considered a relationship between attachment anxiety and NES. In Study 1, we hypothesised (pre-registered) that attachment anxiety would predict NES score and that this relationship would be mediated by disinhibited eating. Participants were asked to complete questionnaire measures of attachment orientation, disinhibited eating (emotional and uncontrolled eating) and NES. Our parallel mediation model confirmed a direct relationship between attachment anxiety and NES (p < .001) and showed an indirect path via both emotional (95% CI: 0.15-0.63) and uncontrolled eating (95% CI: 0.001-0.36). In Study 2, we showed that fear of negative evaluation of eating significantly mediated a reversed relationship between attachment anxiety and NES (95% CI: 0.02-0.04). Finally, across both studies we used a novel tool to assess "eating to cope". We showed a relationship with emotional eating but failed to show a robust relationship with NES. Attachment orientation may represent a potential intervention target for night eating syndrome. Future research should consider a longitudinal approach to strengthen our understanding of directionality amongst these factors.


Subject(s)
Feeding and Eating Disorders , Night Eating Syndrome , Adult , Anxiety , Body Mass Index , Cross-Sectional Studies , Humans , Night Eating Syndrome/psychology , United Kingdom
4.
Eur J Psychotraumatol ; 12(1): 1968139, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34691369

ABSTRACT

Background: Political violence and constraints on liberty of movement can have consequences for health and well-being but affect individuals differently. Objective: In three Palestinian samples, we sought to examine the relationship between key environmental and psychological factors and general and mental health, including the previously unexplored roles of constraints to liberty of movement and attachment orientation. Method: Participants (N = 519) in the Occupied Palestinian Territories and Jordan completed questionnaires on constraints to liberty of movement, attachment insecurity, resource loss, experience of political violence , demographics, general healthdepression, and anxiety. All measures were translated from English to Arabic and back-translated into English. Results: Findings from regression and mediation analyses indicated that (1) differences in general and mental health among Palestinians in the Occupied Palestinian Territories and the diaspora in Jordan can be explained by the assessed constructs; (2) constraints to liberty of movement, attachment avoidance, and resource loss significantly accounted for poor general health; (3) constraints to liberty of movement, attachment anxiety, and resource loss significantly explained general anxiety symptoms; and (4) attachment anxiety, resource loss, and experience of political violence significantly explained depression symptoms. Conclusion: The findings have theory-building implications for psychological models of human flourishing and suffering, suggesting that they are incomplete without consideration of liberty as a context, as well as implications for policymakers and champions of global health initiatives, as they highlight the psychological effects of constraints to liberty of movement on health.


Antecedentes: La violencia política y las restricciones a la libertad de movimiento pueden tener consecuencias para la salud y el bienestar, pero afectan a las personas de manera diferente.Objetivo: En tres muestras palestinas, buscamos examinar la relación entre factores ambientales y psicológicos clave y la salud general y mental, incluidos los roles previamente inexplorados de las restricciones a la libertad de movimiento y el estilo de apego.Método: Los participantes (N = 519) en los Territorios Palestinos Ocupados y Jordania completaron cuestionarios sobre restricciones a la libertad de movimiento (escala de 4 ítems ideada por los autores para el propósito del presente estudio), inseguridad en el apego (Escala de Experiencias en Relaciones Cercanas - Short Form), pérdida de recursos (escala de Evaluación de Conservación de Recursos), experiencia de violencia política (Experiencia y miedo a la violencia política), demografía, salud y salud mental (PHQ4 para la depresión evaluación de 2 ítems para la ansiedad). Todas las medidas se tradujeron del inglés al árabe y retrotraducidas al inglés.Resultados: Los resultados de los análisis de regresión y mediación indicaron que (i) las diferencias en la salud general y mental entre los palestinos en los Territorios Palestinos Ocupados y la diáspora en Jordania pueden explicarse por los constructos evaluados; (ii) las limitaciones a la libertad de movimiento, el apego evitativo y la pérdida de recursos explicaron significativamente la salud general deteriorada; (iii) las limitaciones a la libertad de movimiento, el apego ansioso y la pérdida de recursos explicaron significativamente los síntomas generales de ansiedad; y (iv) el apego ansioso, la pérdida de recursos y la experiencia de violencia política explicaron significativamente los síntomas de la depresión.Conclusión: Los hallazgos tienen implicaciones para la construcción de teorías para los modelos psicológicos del crecimiento y el sufrimiento humano, lo que sugiere que están incompletos sin la consideración de la libertad como contexto, así como implicaciones para los responsables de las políticas y los defensores de las iniciativas de salud global, ya que destacan los efectos psicológicos de las limitaciones a la libertad de circulación en la salud.


Subject(s)
Anxiety/psychology , Arabs , Depression/psychology , Diagnostic Self Evaluation , Freedom , Object Attachment , Adult , Arabs/psychology , Arabs/statistics & numerical data , Female , Humans , Jordan , Male , Middle East , Quality of Life/psychology , Surveys and Questionnaires , Translations , Violence/psychology
5.
Brain Sci ; 11(10)2021 Sep 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34679322

ABSTRACT

Attachment security priming effects therapeutic change in people with depression and anxiety. Preliminary studies indicate that visualising secure attachment memories also reduces paranoia in non-clinical and clinical groups, probably due to a decrease in cognitive fusion. Benefits to clinical populations depend on the sustainability of these effects and the impact on help-seeking behaviours. The combination of paranoia and an insecure-avoidant attachment style is likely to be a particular barrier to help seeking. We used a longitudinal experimental design to test the impact of repeated attachment priming on paranoia, mood and help-seeking intentions and whether cognitive fusion mediates these effects. Seventy-nine people with high levels of non-clinical paranoia, aged 18-50 years (M = 20.53, SD = 4.57), were randomly assigned to a secure or insecure-avoidant priming condition. Participants rehearsed the visualisation prime on four consecutive days and were assessed on standardised measures of paranoia, positive and negative affect, help-seeking intentions and cognitive fusion. A series of mixed-model analyses of variance showed that security priming decreases paranoia, negative affect and cognitive fusion and increases positive affect and help seeking, compared to insecure-avoidant priming. Examining the impact of primed attachment (rather than measured attachment style) allows us to draw conclusions about the causal processes involved; mediation analyses showed indirect effects of the primes on paranoia and negative affect through cognitive fusion. With a growing understanding of (1) the impact of security priming on paranoia, affect and help-seeking behaviours, (2) causal mechanisms and (3) sustainability of effects, security priming may be developed into a viable intervention for clinical populations.

6.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32033183

ABSTRACT

: Attachment security priming has been extensively used in relationship research to explore the contents of mental models of attachment and examine the benefits derived from enhancing security. This systematic review explores the effectiveness of attachment security priming in improving positive affect and reducing negative affect in adults and children. The review searched four electronic databases for peer-reviewed journal articles. Thirty empirical studies met our inclusion criteria, including 28 adult and 2 child and adolescent samples. The findings show that attachment security priming improved positive affect and reduced negative affect relative to control primes. Supraliminal and subliminal primes were equally effective in enhancing security in one-shot prime studies (we only reviewed repeated priming studies using supraliminal primes so could not compare prime types in these). Global attachment style moderated the primed style in approximately half of the studies. Importantly, repeated priming studies showed a cumulative positive effect of security priming over time. We conclude that repeated priming study designs may be the most effective. More research is needed that explores the use of attachment security priming as a possible intervention to improve emotional wellbeing, in particular for adolescents and children.


Subject(s)
Affect , Object Attachment , Humans
7.
Int J Obes (Lond) ; 44(2): 438-446, 2020 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31164726

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: Previous research has demonstrated relationships between attachment orientations (expectations of ourselves and others in interpersonal relationships), eating behaviours and obesity. However, such research has been limited to investigations of 'organised' forms of attachment orientations (reflecting coherent and predictable patterns of behaviour). Theoretically, aberrant eating behaviours and body mass index, should also be related to 'disorganized attachment.' SUBJECTS: Here we test these relationships for the first time in a general population. Secondary data analyses of a pre-existing dataset were conducted (N = 537). METHODS USED: Questionnaire measures of organised (avoidant and anxious) and disorganized attachment were included alongside eating behaviour measures (emotional eating, uncontrolled eating and cognitive restraint) and body mass index (BMI). RESULTS: Parallel multiple mediation analysis (PROCESS) showed that uncontrolled eating (but not emotional eating or cognitive restraint) significantly mediated a relationship between disorganized attachment and body mass index (significant indirect relationship; LLCI = 0.02 ULCI = 0.16) when both attachment anxiety and avoidance were included as covariates. CONCLUSIONS: We suggest that the mechanism underpinning this indirect relationship is a form of maladaptive affect regulation, but that the behavioural motivators differ from those observed in anxiously attached individuals. Rather than eating being a premeditated strategy used by individuals high in disorganized attachment to manage emotion, opportunities to eat are simply taken as they present themselves. Professionals engaged in addressing eating problems and weight management should consider attachment orientations in their patient assessments and be mindful that attachment disorganized individuals are especially likely to engage in uncontrolled eating behaviours that are associated with a higher BMI.


Subject(s)
Body Mass Index , Emotions/physiology , Feeding Behavior/psychology , Interpersonal Relations , Obesity/psychology , Adolescent , Adult , Feeding and Eating Disorders/psychology , Female , Humans , Hyperphagia/psychology , Male , Obesity/epidemiology , Surveys and Questionnaires , Young Adult
8.
Br J Psychol ; 110(1): 15-39, 2019 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29984408

ABSTRACT

We sought to understand how attachment orientation influenced attitudes towards different types of psychological therapies. In two studies, we (1) examined attachment orientation as a predictor of attitudes towards different therapies and (2) tested whether attachment security priming could improve attitudes. Study 1 (n = 339) found associations between attachment orientation and attitudes towards, and likelihood of using different therapies. Positive and negative attitudes about different therapies mediated the relationship between attachment avoidance and likelihood of use. Study 2 (n = 412) showed that primed security (vs. neutral prime) improved attitudes towards relational, non-relational and distanced-relational therapies for those with a fearful-avoidant attachment orientation. For relational and distanced-relational therapies, the mechanism of this effect was increased cognitive openness. Attachment orientation is a determinant of therapy attitudes and anticipated help-seeking behaviour. Priming security may promote open-minded decision-making about some therapies. Findings are discussed with relevance to attachment theory, research and clinical practice.


Subject(s)
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Help-Seeking Behavior , Object Attachment , Patient Acceptance of Health Care/psychology , Psychotherapy , Adult , Avoidance Learning , Cognition , Decision Making , Fear , Female , Humans , Male , Models, Psychological
9.
Appetite ; 127: 214-222, 2018 08 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29733864

ABSTRACT

Previous research indicates that attachment anxiety (fear of abandonment) is predictive of overeating and higher body mass index (BMI). The current study explored the nature of the mechanisms underpinning this relationship. Study 1 assessed the relative contribution of 'emotional eating', 'susceptibility to hunger' and 'uncontrolled eating'. Study 2 assessed whether misperception of emotion and poor emotion management would mediate the relationship between attachment anxiety and stress-induced eating (and then BMI). Two cross-sectional online questionnaire studies were conducted (Study 1 N = 665, & Study 2 N = 548), in UK and US-based samples, which assessed attachment orientation and BMI alongside the potential mediators. The relative contribution of emotional eating, susceptibility to hunger and uncontrolled eating (Study 1) and difficulties in emotion regulation and stress-induced eating (Study 2) as mediators of this relationship were examined. In Study 1, parallel multiple mediation analysis (PROCESS) showed that emotional eating and susceptibility to hunger (but not uncontrolled eating) were significant mediators of the relationship between attachment anxiety and BMI. In Study 2, serial mediation analysis showed that difficulties in 'engaging with goal directed behaviours when upset' and stress-induced eating operated in series to significantly mediate the relationship between attachment anxiety and BMI. These findings suggest that attachment anxious individuals feel less capable in disengaging from negative emotions and go on to try to soothe themselves through eating which has a negative impact on their BMI. There was less support for an explanation of the relationship between attachment anxiety and BMI based around the misperception of emotion. Taken together, the findings highlight attachment anxiety and emotion regulation strategies as key targets for interventions that aim to reduce overeating and excess body weight.


Subject(s)
Anxiety Disorders/physiopathology , Body Mass Index , Emotions , Feeding Behavior/psychology , Interpersonal Relations , Adaptation, Psychological , Adult , Eating/psychology , Female , Humans , Hunger , Hyperphagia/psychology , Male , Surveys and Questionnaires
10.
J Affect Disord ; 234: 201-206, 2018 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29544165

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The aim of this study was to assess the potential effectiveness of secure attachment priming in outpatients with depressive disorders. METHODS: Forty-eight participants engaged in secure attachment priming or neutral priming in the laboratory (Time 1), after which they received three daily consecutive primes via text message (Times 2-4), aimed at maintaining the effects from Time 1. A follow-up one day later (Time 5) was also included. Dependent measures were assessed at Times 1, 4 and 5. RESULTS: Participants in the secure attachment priming condition experienced higher felt-security than the control group at all time-points, indicating that the felt-security benefit was maintained through repeated priming. Secure priming had a greater impact on reducing symptoms of anxiety and depression in comparison to the control prime, though the differences were only significant at Time 4. LIMITATIONS: The moderate sample size limited our statistical power. CONCLUSIONS: This study was the first experiment using repeated secure attachment priming within a clinical sample. Our findings have potential clinical implications; security priming could be used alongside other treatments to improve outcome. Recommendations for further research are discussed.


Subject(s)
Depressive Disorder/psychology , Depressive Disorder/therapy , Object Attachment , Text Messaging , Adult , Affect , Anxiety/prevention & control , Depression/psychology , Depression/therapy , Emotions , Female , Humans , Male , Motor Activity , Outpatients/psychology
11.
Front Psychol ; 7: 1003, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27458402

ABSTRACT

Despite being a universal human attachment behavior, little is known about individual differences in crying. To facilitate such examination we first recommend shortened versions of the attitudes and proneness sections of the Adult Crying Inventory using two independent samples. Importantly, we examine attachment orientation differences in crying proneness and test the mediating role of attitudes toward crying in this relationship. Participants (Sample 1 N = 623, Sample 2 N = 781), completed online measures of adult attachment dimensions (avoidance and anxiety), attitudes toward crying, and crying proneness. Exploratory factor analyses in Sample 1 revealed four factors for crying attitudes: crying helps one feel better; crying is healthy; hatred of crying; and crying is controllable; and three factors for crying proneness: threat to self; sadness; and joy. Confirmatory factor analyses in Sample 2 replicated these structures. Theoretically and statistically justified short forms of each scale were created. Multiple mediation analyses revealed similar patterns of results across the two samples, with the attitudes "crying is healthy" and "crying is controllable" consistently mediating the positive links between attachment anxiety and crying proneness, and the negative links between attachment avoidance and crying proneness. Results are discussed in relation to attachment and emotion regulation literature.

12.
Mindfulness (N Y) ; 7: 642-650, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27217843

ABSTRACT

Mindfulness practice has many mental and physical health benefits but can be perceived as 'difficult' by some individuals. This perception can discourage compliance with mindfulness meditation training programs. The present research examined whether the activation of thoughts and feelings related to attachment security and self-compassion (through semantic priming) prior to a mindfulness meditation session might influence willingness to engage in future mindfulness training. We expected both of these primes to positively influence participants' willingness to continue with mindfulness training. We primed 117 meditation-naïve individuals (84 female; mean age of 22.3 years, SD = 4.83) with either a self-compassion, attachment security, or a neutral control prime prior to an introductory mindfulness exercise and measured their post-session willingness to engage in further training. Both experimental primes resulted in higher willingness to engage in further mindfulness training relative to the control condition. The self-compassion prime did so indirectly by increasing state mindfulness, while the attachment security prime had a direct effect. This study supports theoretical links between self-compassion and mindfulness and reveals a causal role for these factors in promoting willingness to engage in mindfulness training. Our findings have implications for improving compliance with mindfulness intervention programs.

13.
Attach Hum Dev ; 16(1): 93-101, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24245604

ABSTRACT

Attachment security can be induced in laboratory settings (e.g., Rowe & Carnelley, 2003) and the beneficial effects of repeated security priming can last for a number of days (e.g., Carnelley & Rowe, 2007). The priming process, however, can be costly in terms of time. We explored the effectiveness of security priming via text message. Participants completed a visualisation task (a secure attachment experience or neutral experience) in the laboratory. On three consecutive days following the laboratory task, participants received (secure or neutral) text message visualisation tasks. Participants in the secure condition reported significantly higher felt security than those in the neutral condition, immediately after the laboratory prime, after the last text message prime and one day after the last text prime. These findings suggest that security priming via text messages is an innovative methodological advancement that effectively induces felt security, representing a potential direction forward for security priming research.


Subject(s)
Object Attachment , Text Messaging , Adolescent , Adult , Emotions , Female , Humans , Male , Models, Theoretical , Self Report , Young Adult
14.
Front Hum Neurosci ; 7: 197, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23754995

ABSTRACT

Oxytocin (OT) is thought to play an important role in human interpersonal information processing and behavior. By inference, OT should facilitate empathic responding, i.e., the ability to feel for others and to take their perspective. In two independent double-blind, placebo-controlled between-subjects studies, we assessed the effect of intranasally administered OT on affective empathy and perspective taking, whilst also examining potential sex differences (e.g., women being more empathic than men). In study 1, we provided 96 participants (48 men) with an empathy scenario and recorded self-reports of empathic reactions to the scenario, while in study 2, a sample of 120 individuals (60 men) performed a computerized implicit perspective taking task. Whilst results from Study 1 showed no influence of OT on affective empathy, we found in Study 2 that OT exerted an effect on perspective taking ability in men. More specifically, men responded faster than women in the placebo group but they responded as slowly as women in the OT group. We conjecture that men in the OT group adopted a social perspective taking strategy, such as did women in both groups, but not men in the placebo group. On the basis of results across both studies, we suggest that self-report measures (such as used in Study 1) might be less sensitive to OT effects than more implicit measures of empathy such as that used in Study 2. If these assumptions are confirmed, one could infer that OT effects on empathic responses are more pronounced in men than women, and that any such effect is best studied using more implicit measures of empathy rather than explicit self-report measures.

15.
PLoS One ; 8(2): e58113, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23469148

ABSTRACT

Oxytocin has been shown to promote a host of social behaviors in humans but the exact mechanisms by which it exerts its effects are unspecified. One prominent theory suggests that oxytocin increases approach and decreases avoidance to social stimuli. Another dominant theory posits that oxytocin increases the salience of social stimuli. Herein, we report a direct test of these hypotheses. In a double-blind, placebo-controlled study we examined approach-avoidance motor responses to social and non-social emotional stimuli. One hundred and twenty participants self-administered either 24 IU oxytocin or placebo and moved a lever toward or away from pictures of faces depicting emotional expressions or from natural scenes appearing before them on a computer screen. Lever movements toward stimuli decreased and movements away increased stimuli size producing the illusion that stimuli moved away from or approached participants. Reaction time data were recorded. The task produced the effects that were anticipated on the basis of the approach-avoidance literature in relation to emotional stimuli, yet the anticipated speeded approach and slowed avoidance responses to emotional faces by the oxytocin group were not observed. Interestingly, the oxytocin treatment group was faster to approach and avoid faces depicting disgust relative to the placebo group, suggesting a salience of disgust for the former group. Results also showed that within the oxytocin group women's reaction times to all emotional faces were faster than those of men, suggesting sex specific effects of oxytocin. The present findings provide the first direct evidence that intranasal oxytocin administration does not enhance approach/avoidance to social stimuli and does not exert a stronger effect on social vs. non-social stimuli in the context of processing of emotional expressions and scenes. Instead, our data suggest that oxytocin administration increases the salience of certain social stimuli and point to a possible role for oxytocin in behavioral prophylaxis.


Subject(s)
Administration, Intranasal , Avoidance Learning/drug effects , Emotions/physiology , Motor Activity/drug effects , Oxytocin/administration & dosage , Oxytocin/pharmacology , Adolescent , Adult , Emotions/drug effects , Female , Humans , Interpersonal Relations , Male , Photic Stimulation , Psychomotor Performance/drug effects , Recognition, Psychology/drug effects , Sex Factors , Young Adult
16.
Laterality ; 17(4): 453-85, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21400347

ABSTRACT

The reliance in experimental psychology on testing undergraduate populations with relatively little life experience, and/or ambiguously valenced stimuli with varying degrees of self-relevance, may have contributed to inconsistent findings in the literature on the valence hypothesis. To control for these potential limitations, the current study assessed lateralised lexical decisions for positive and negative attachment words in 40 middle-aged male and female participants. Self-relevance was manipulated in two ways: by testing currently married compared with previously married individuals and by assessing self-relevance ratings individually for each word. Results replicated a left hemisphere advantage for lexical decisions and a processing advantage of emotional over neutral words but did not support the valence hypothesis. Positive attachment words yielded a processing advantage over neutral words in the right hemisphere, while emotional words (irrespective of valence) yielded a processing advantage over neutral words in the left hemisphere. Both self-relevance manipulations were unrelated to lateralised performance. The role of participant sex and age in emotion processing are discussed as potential modulators of the present findings.


Subject(s)
Divorce/psychology , Ego , Emotions , Functional Laterality , Spouses/psychology , Adult , Age Factors , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Psychomotor Performance , Self Report
17.
Psychoneuroendocrinology ; 36(8): 1257-60, 2011 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21377804

ABSTRACT

Preferences for sexually dimorphic traits in men's faces are consistent with a trade-off between cues to indirect (genetic) and direct (prosociality) benefits, associated perceptually with relative masculinity and femininity respectively. As the neuropeptide oxytocin (OT) has been shown to promote social perception, we hypothesized that temporary OT elevation would result in a preference for masculinity in men's faces, by reducing the apparent social costs of masculine traits. In a double-blind, placebo-controlled study, 96 participants received either 24 IU OT or placebo. They then completed a computer task in which they used the mouse to alter the shape of displayed men's and women's faces, making them look more or less masculine. Participants were instructed to make each face as attractive as possible. OT administration led to a trend for a relative preference for masculinity in men's faces but did not affect preferences for femininity in women's faces, and this effect occurred irrespective of the participant's sex. We tentatively speculate that OT may 'mask' negative personality attributions normally associated with masculine male faces. These results may be pointing to the role of personality attribution in attractiveness judgements, and the role of OT in social perception.


Subject(s)
Choice Behavior/drug effects , Face , Masculinity , Oxytocin/pharmacology , Adult , Affect/drug effects , Affect/physiology , Anxiety/epidemiology , Choice Behavior/physiology , Double-Blind Method , Female , Femininity , Gender Identity , Humans , Male , Oxytocin/administration & dosage , Sexual Behavior/drug effects , Sexual Behavior/physiology , Social Perception , Young Adult
18.
Br J Psychol ; 101(Pt 2): 277-91, 2010 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19619391

ABSTRACT

We tested whether putting oneself in the shoes of others is easier for women, possibly as a function of individuals' empathy levels, and whether any sex difference might be modulated by the sex of presented figures. Participants (N=100, 50 women) imagined (a) being in the spatial position of front-facing and back-facing female and male figures (third person perspective (3PP) task) and (b) that the figures were their own mirror reflections (first person perspective (1PP) task). After mentally taking the figure's position, individuals decided whether the indicated hand of the figure would be their own left or right hand. Contrary to our hypothesis, results from the 3PP-task showed higher rotational costs for women than men, suggesting that mental rotation rather than social strategies had been employed. However, faster responding by women with higher empathy scores would appear to indicate that some women engaged social perspective taking strategies irrespective of the figures' position. Figures' sex was relevant to task performance as higher rotational costs were observed for male figures in the 3PP-task for both sexes and for female figures in the 1PP-task for women. We argue that these latter findings indicate that performance was facilitated and/or inhibited towards figures associated with specific social and emotional implications.


Subject(s)
Empathy , Gender Identity , Imagination , Orientation , Pattern Recognition, Visual , Personal Construct Theory , Space Perception , Adolescent , Adult , Discrimination, Psychological , Female , Functional Laterality , Humans , Male , Problem Solving , Reaction Time , Young Adult
19.
Horm Behav ; 56(1): 128-32, 2009 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19344725

ABSTRACT

The neuropeptide oxytocin is involved in the development and maintenance of attachment behaviours in humans and other species. Little is known, however, about how it affects judgements of unfamiliar others. In a double-blind placebo-controlled study we investigated the effect of a single intranasal dose of oxytocin on judgements of facial trustworthiness and attractiveness. We found that oxytocin administration increased ratings of trustworthiness and attractiveness of male and female targets in raters of both sexes relative to control ratings, suggesting that higher levels of this neuropeptide may enhance affiliative behaviour towards unfamiliar others. Our results provide evidence in support of a general facilitative role of oxytocin in promoting positive trait judgements.


Subject(s)
Esthetics , Face , Oxytocics/administration & dosage , Oxytocin/administration & dosage , Social Perception , Trust , Adolescent , Adult , Affect/drug effects , Analysis of Variance , Double-Blind Method , Female , Humans , Male , Neuropsychological Tests , Sex Characteristics , Wakefulness/drug effects , Young Adult
20.
J Clin Exp Neuropsychol ; 30(4): 471-80, 2008 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18938682

ABSTRACT

Inconsistent findings regarding the valence hypothesis might relate to ambiguously valenced stimuli used in some studies. To account for this potential caveat, we used positive and negative attachment words. A total of 50 participants made lexical decisions in a bilateral simultaneous presentation paradigm. Results showed a general right-visual-field advantage for lexical decisions and a general superiority for positive over negative words. Crucially, we found a left-visual-field advantage for positive over negative words. Results oppose the valence hypothesis, but support a specific role of the right hemisphere in emotional processing, in particular when dealing with positive interpersonal relationship information.


Subject(s)
Dominance, Cerebral/physiology , Emotions/physiology , Mental Processes/physiology , Semantics , Vocabulary , Adolescent , Adult , Analysis of Variance , Female , Humans , Neuropsychological Tests , Reaction Time/physiology
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...