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      Activation of the attachment system in adulthood: threat-related primes increase the accessibility of mental representations of attachment figures.

      Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
      Adult, Analysis of Variance, Anxiety, psychology, Female, Humans, Israel, Male, Object Attachment, Psychological Tests, Psychological Theory, Reaction Time, Regression Analysis

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          Abstract

          Three studies explored the effects of subliminal threat on the activation of representations of attachment figures. This accessibility was measured in a lexical decision task and a Stroop task following threat- or neutral-word primes, and was compared with the accessibility of representations of other close persons, known but not close persons, and unknown persons. Participants also reported on their attachment style. Threat primes led to increased accessibility of representations of attachment figures. This effect was specific to attachment figures and was replicated across tasks and experiments. Attachment anxiety heightened accessibility of representations of attachment figures even in neutral contexts, whereas attachment avoidance inhibited this activation when the threat prime was the word separation. These effects were not, explained by trait anxiety. The discussion focuses on the dynamics of attachment-system activation in adulthood.

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          Facilitation in recognizing pairs of words: evidence of a dependence between retrieval operations.

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            Affect, cognition, and awareness: affective priming with optimal and suboptimal stimulus exposures.

            The affective primacy hypothesis (R. B. Zajonc, 1980) asserts that positive and negative affective reactions can be evoked with minimal stimulus input and virtually no cognitive processing. The present work tested this hypothesis by comparing the effects of affective and cognitive priming under extremely brief (suboptimal) and longer (optimal) exposure durations. At suboptimal exposures only affective primes produced significant shifts in Ss' judgments of novel stimuli. These results suggest that when affect is elicited outside of conscious awareness, it is diffuse and nonspecific, and its origin and address are not accessible. Having minimal cognitive participation, such gross and nonspecific affective reactions can therefore be diffused or displaced onto unrelated stimuli. At optimal exposures this pattern of results was reversed such that only cognitive primes produced significant shifts in judgments. Together, these results support the affective primacy hypothesis.
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              Support seeking and support giving within couples in an anxiety-provoking situation: The role of attachment styles.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                12374442
                10.1037/0022-3514.83.4.881

                Chemistry
                Adult,Analysis of Variance,Anxiety,psychology,Female,Humans,Israel,Male,Object Attachment,Psychological Tests,Psychological Theory,Reaction Time,Regression Analysis

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