Chapter 8: Fear, Anxiety, and Stress
Defining Anxiety and Comparing Anxiety to Fear
- Does anxiety meet the requirements for an emotion? Why or why not?
- What is the relationship between anxiety and attentional biases?
- How are fear and anxiety similar? different?
- How does the research on anxiety help us to better understand psychological disorders?
Table 8
Emotion Components for Fear and Anxiety
Component | Fear | Anxiety |
---|---|---|
Eliciting Event Required? | Yes! Post-stimulus Specific |
No! Pre-Stimulus Generalized/Ambiguous |
Cognitive Appraisals | “Something bad now, very soon”
More Controllable, |
“Something bad in the future”
Less controllable, Expected, Can’t Cope, |
Physiology | SNS Activation PNS Deactiation |
SNS Activation PNS actiation |
Behavior | Flee, desire to escape | Limited responses, dont know how to cope |
Subjective Feelings | Unpleasant, highly arousing |
Unpleasant highly arousing, helplessness |
Perspectives of Emotion
In general, most emotion researchers believe anxiety is not a fleeting emotion. Basic emotions researchers such as Ekman further state anxiety does not meet the requirements for a basic emotion – particularly because universal facial expressions do not exist. Social constructivists point out the cultural differences in eliciting events, symptoms, and cognitive appraisals of panic attacks, an anxiety disorder (Lewis-Fernández et al., 2010). Table 9 shows eliciting events across world regions and their corresponding term in that culture’s language. Western cultures view anxiety as caused by unexpected events, whereas other cultures view anxiety as caused by expected events (such as standing up or the weather).
World Region or Country | Cause of Panic Attacks | Cultural Term |
---|---|---|
Latin America | Interpersonal arguments and Major Life Changes | ataque de nervios |
Cambodia | Standing up and Atmospheric Wind | khyâl (atmospheric wind causing dizziness, tinnitus, neck soreness) |
Vietnam | Atmospheric Wind that causes headaches | trung gió |
Japan and South Korea | Fear of offending someone else due to own psychological/physical character flaws (e.g., staring too long, body odor) or showing wrong facial expression |
Taijin kyofusho (TKS; Japanese for fear of interpersonal rejection) |
United States | Major Life Changes | – |