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The Origins of Specific Phobias: Influential Theories and Current Perspectives

Journal

REVIEW OF GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 13, Issue 4, Pages 335-348

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1037/a0017759

Keywords

specific phobias; etiology; fear; emotion; development

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Fears are quick and adaptive responses that permit powerful reply to imminent threats. Less adaptive, phobias are extreme manifestations of fear to objects or situations in the absence of a proportional danger. Although the utility of fear is accepted, the nature of phobias is controversial. Initial theories favored a fear conditioning-based explanation, with vicarious and information learning pathways subsequently included as additional routes to the development of specific phobias. More recently, an important group of investigations strengthened the case for a nonassociative account of fear acquisition proposing that evolutionarily relevant fears can occur without any need of critical learning experiences. In parallel, there is some evidence for a dedicated fear module in the detection of threats, involving the amygdala, which is relatively independent from conscious cognitive control. Nonetheless, cognitive models stress learning and developmental factors and their role in the etiology and maintenance of phobic behavior. This article critically reviews each of these views and theories stressing their recent developments, weaknesses, and controversies with an aim to provide the groundwork for the construction of a more integrated position, Finally, the authors suggest encouraging trends in recent research.

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