Publication | Closed Access
Tales from the Screen: Enduring Fright Reactions to Scary Media
175
Citations
13
References
1999
Year
Psychological Co-morbiditiesScary MediaAffective NeuroscienceFear AppealsResidual AnxietyFilm TheoryPopular CulturePsychologyMedia StudiesAffective ScienceSocial SciencesEmotional ResponseDance MediaEmotion RegulationPsychophysiologyCoping StrategiesAffect PerceptionMedia PsychologyExperimental PsychopathologyTelevision StudyBehavioral SciencesDigital StorytellingPsychiatryTheatreFright ReactionsVisual CultureEmotionTelevisionHauntologyMass CommunicationArtsAnxiety DisordersAudience ReceptionPsychopathology
This study was conducted to examine enduring fright reactions to mass media via recollective self-reports of a sample of undergraduates (average age 20.6 years) from two universities. Ninety percent (138 of 153) of the participants reported such a reaction. Most experiences occurred in childhood or adolescence, with 26.1% of the participants still experiencing residual anxiety at the time of measurement. More than half of the sample reported subsequent disturbances in sleeping or eating patterns, and a substantial proportion reported avoiding or dreading the situation depicted in the program or movie and mental preoccupation with the stimulus. Stimulus types were coded according to the jive categories of stimuli related to phobic reactions—animal, environmental, situational, blood/injection/injury, and "other" (disturbing sounds and distorted images)—described in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV; American Psychiatric Association, 1994). Almost all of the films or movies reported contained stimuli from at least one of these categories. Developmental differences were observed in both the types of stimuli that provoked fright responses and the coping strategies used by viewers.
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