Exploring the effects of self-esteem and mortality salience on proximal and distally measured death anxiety: a further test of the dual process model of terror management

被引:0
作者
Andrew A. Abeyta
Jacob Juhl
Clay Routledge
机构
[1] North Dakota State University,
[2] University of Southampton,undefined
来源
Motivation and Emotion | 2014年 / 38卷
关键词
Terror management theory; Death-anxiety; Death and dying; Self-esteem;
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学科分类号
摘要
The dual process model of terror management theory posits that proximal and distal defenses prevent death-related cognition from leading to death-anxiety. Further, the theory identifies self-esteem as a trait level resource that helps people avoid the awareness of death-anxiety. However, to date, no studies have examined the proximal and distal effects of death-related cognition and self-esteem on death-anxiety. In the present study, we assessed trait self-esteem, manipulated the awareness of death (mortality salience), and measured death-anxiety either immediately (proximally) or after a delay/distraction task (distally). Mortality salience did not lead to increased death-anxiety immediately after the mortality salience, but did so after a delay. Furthermore, this distal increase in death anxiety was only observed at low levels of self-esteem.
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页码:523 / 528
页数:5
相关论文
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