The Inevitability of Death: Mental Simulation Moderates the Effect of Death Anxiety on Older Adults' Vulnerability to Fraud.

IF 2.2 3区 医学 Q2 GERONTOLOGY
Zhihu Chen, Jing Wen, Yingcong Li, Xinyu Zhang, Chenyu Lv, Jingjin Shao
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Death anxiety arousal is a common tactic in fraud targeting older adults; however, little is known about its impact on vulnerability to fraud and the moderating role of mental simulation. Two experiments were conducted using the mortality salience task. Experiment 1 employed a mortality salience manipulation to examine the causality of death anxiety arousal affecting older adults' vulnerability to fraud using a behavioral experiment. Experiment 2 used the imaginary priming paradigm to manipulate different types of mental simulation to address whether mental simulation could moderate the relationship between death anxiety and vulnerability to fraud. The results showed that death anxiety significantly increased the vulnerability to fraud. Process and downward outcome simulation buffered this effect, while upward outcome simulation exacerbated it. Clinicians may focus on relieving death anxiety, decreasing upward outcome simulation, and enhancing process or downward outcome simulation as promising pathways to protect older adults against fraud.

死亡的不可避免性:心理模拟调节了死亡焦虑对老年人易受欺诈性的影响。
死亡焦虑唤醒是针对老年人的欺诈行为中的一种常见手段;然而,人们对死亡焦虑唤醒对易受欺诈性的影响以及心理模拟的调节作用知之甚少。我们使用死亡突出任务进行了两项实验。实验 1 采用了死亡显著性操作,通过行为实验来研究死亡焦虑唤醒对老年人易受欺诈性的因果关系。实验 2 采用想象引物范式,操纵不同类型的心理模拟,以探讨心理模拟能否缓和死亡焦虑与易受欺诈性之间的关系。结果表明,死亡焦虑会明显增加受欺诈的可能性。过程模拟和向下结果模拟可以缓冲这种影响,而向上结果模拟则会加剧这种影响。临床医生可将重点放在缓解死亡焦虑、减少向上结果模拟、加强过程或向下结果模拟上,以此作为保护老年人免受欺诈的有效途径。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
13.30%
发文量
202
期刊介绍: The Journal of Applied Gerontology (JAG) is the official journal of the Southern Gerontological Society. It features articles that focus on research applications intended to improve the quality of life of older persons or to enhance our understanding of age-related issues that will eventually lead to such outcomes. We construe application broadly and encourage contributions across a range of applications toward those foci, including interventions, methodology, policy, and theory. Manuscripts from all disciplines represented in gerontology are welcome. Because the circulation and intended audience of JAG is global, contributions from international authors are encouraged.
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