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Mortality salience increases death-anxiety for individuals low in personal need for structure

Mortality salience increases death-anxiety for individuals low in personal need for structure
Mortality salience increases death-anxiety for individuals low in personal need for structure
Research derived from terror management theory suggests that death cognition does not lead to death-anxiety because people respond to thoughts of death by turning to social and cultural structures that provide a sense of psychological security. However, recent research indicates that it is people high, but not low, in personal need for structure that turn to social and cultural structures in response to heightened death cognition. Such findings suggest that people low in PNS may be vulnerable to experiencing death-anxiety when death thoughts are activated. The current study explored this possibility. Individual differences in personal need for structure were measured and death cognition (mortality salience) was manipulated. Subsequently, death-anxiety was assessed. Mortality salience increased death-anxiety, but only among individuals low in personal need for structure.
0146-7239
Routledge, Clay
c1e0088a-3cc4-4d54-bbd3-de7d286429d8
Juhl, Jacob
1c3b38b1-ba9e-4f3c-8520-ebca3b712fa2
Vess, Matthew
9eb6dbb9-c5ea-4b15-befb-b8e9720d9d07
Routledge, Clay
c1e0088a-3cc4-4d54-bbd3-de7d286429d8
Juhl, Jacob
1c3b38b1-ba9e-4f3c-8520-ebca3b712fa2
Vess, Matthew
9eb6dbb9-c5ea-4b15-befb-b8e9720d9d07

Routledge, Clay, Juhl, Jacob and Vess, Matthew (2012) Mortality salience increases death-anxiety for individuals low in personal need for structure. Motivation and Emotion. (doi:10.1007/s11031-012-9313-6).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Research derived from terror management theory suggests that death cognition does not lead to death-anxiety because people respond to thoughts of death by turning to social and cultural structures that provide a sense of psychological security. However, recent research indicates that it is people high, but not low, in personal need for structure that turn to social and cultural structures in response to heightened death cognition. Such findings suggest that people low in PNS may be vulnerable to experiencing death-anxiety when death thoughts are activated. The current study explored this possibility. Individual differences in personal need for structure were measured and death cognition (mortality salience) was manipulated. Subsequently, death-anxiety was assessed. Mortality salience increased death-anxiety, but only among individuals low in personal need for structure.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 6 July 2012
Organisations: Psychology

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 348134
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/348134
ISSN: 0146-7239
PURE UUID: 561b5a12-f730-42b7-8ba8-45966034a007

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Date deposited: 06 Feb 2013 13:59
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 12:55

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Contributors

Author: Clay Routledge
Author: Jacob Juhl
Author: Matthew Vess

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