Phobia
a persistent and unreasonable fear of a particular object, or activity or situation
Classical conditioning
a form of learning in which an unconditioned response becomes linked to a previously neutral stimulus to create a learned association
Evaluative learning
when individual forms an association between neutral stimulus and a negative emotion outcome = disgust (no fear emotion)
Expectancy learning
previously neutral/non-threatening stimulus becomes associated with a potentially threatening outcome = FEAR
Background
Aim
2. To attempt to treat a child’s phobia of buttons via targeting both disgust and fear responses
What is the research method?
case study
Why case study?
This method is most fitting as it is particularly useful in researching unusual or rare phenomena
What is the sample and sampling technique?
What is the procedure before the study? (how are the sure that the boy has phobia)
Mother and son both interviewed, to ensure the phobia hadn’t occur because of any trauma or abuse. → also ruled out of OCD as the boy had no recurrent, intrusive thoughts
When and why did the phobia begin?
Phobia began at aged 5
He accidently split a jar of buttons when to collect for more for an art project - this occured in front of his class and teacher
How did his phobia affect his daily life?
it interfered with his normal functioning!
Couldn’t dress himself anymore and avoid clothing with buttons
How is the boy’s feeling towards buttons established?
Through the creation of a hierarchy of feared / disgust provoking stimuli
How did he rate the items in the hierarchy?
Rated each item on a 9-point scale (0-8, 8=most distress)
Rating of 2 = large denim jean buttons
Rating of 8 = small plastic buttons (clear and colored)
What are the two types of intervention used?
Behavioural exposure therapy and imagery exposure
For behavioural exposure therapy, how many sessions? How long each?
Gradual exposure of 4 treatment sessions with 20-30mins each
Is behavioural exposure therapy in-vivo or in-vitro?
in-vivo
What happens during the behavioural exposure therapy?
using positive reinforcement where boy rewarded by his mother each time he demonstrated less fear and for touching buttons.
For imagery exposure, how many sessions?
7 sessions
What beliefs are based on for imagery exposure?
- buttons smell unpleasant
What are the self-control strategies taught in imager exposure?
Imagined buttons falling on him and to consider how they looked, felt and smelled. He was asked to talk freely about how this imagery exposure made him feel
How did imagery exposure progress?
Exposures progressed from images of smaller to larger buttons, according to his hierarchy
3 findings for behavioural exposure
2 findings for imagery exposure