已发表论文

面对真正的死亡威胁:死亡思维可及性的动态变化

 

Authors Zhou J, Chen Y, Xu Y , Liao B, Fu W

Received 22 February 2022

Accepted for publication 20 June 2022

Published 14 July 2022 Volume 2022:15 Pages 1731—1740

DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/PRBM.S361432

Checked for plagiarism Yes

Review by Single anonymous peer review

Peer reviewer comments 3

Editor who approved publication: Professor Igor Elman

Purpose: This study explored the relationship between emotion and death-thought accessibility (DTA) in individuals experiencing true mortality salience (MS), specifically, patients with cancer.
Patients and Methods: The study included 255 participants; among them, 132 patients had cancer and represented the MS group, and 123 had dental pain and served as a control group. Participants completed the Projective Diseases Attitude Assessment Questionnaire to induce priming, completed an affect scale, completed one of four calculation tasks as manipulation of cognitive load (all four were done over several sessions), and performed a Pinyin-Chinese characters exercise to measure DTA.
Results: MS was associated with strong negative emotional arousal. When these negative emotions are generated, they enter an individual’s consciousness and activate proximal defense mechanisms. At this point, DTA can be measured. Patients with cancer had significantly higher levels of DTA in the high-frequency cognitive load condition than in the other three conditions (no task, simple delay task, and single cognitive load task). Patients with dental pain had significantly higher levels of DTA in the no task and simple delay conditions than in the single cognitive load or high-frequency cognitive load conditions. This study also found that negative experiences without MS (specifically, dental pain) are associated with higher levels of DTA.
Conclusion: These findings suggest that in addition to death-related events, both negative and stress-inducing events can produce DTA.
Keywords: mortality salience, cancer, terror management theory, proximal defense mechanisms