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@proceedings{1229441, author = {Krátký, Jan}, booktitle = {Brain, Mind and Religion: 1st International Neuroscience and Religious studies Conference}, keywords = {anxiety; obsessive compulsive behavior; public speaking paradigm; ritualized behavior}, language = {eng}, title = {Inducing anxiety in laboratory setting results in ritualized behavior}, url = {http://www.bu.edu/gdrs/files/2010/09/1st-International-Neuroscience-and-Religious-Studies-Conference-Brain.-Mind.-Religion..pdf}, year = {2015} }
TY - CONF ID - 1229441 AU - Krátký, Jan PY - 2015 TI - Inducing anxiety in laboratory setting results in ritualized behavior KW - anxiety KW - obsessive compulsive behavior KW - public speaking paradigm KW - ritualized behavior UR - http://www.bu.edu/gdrs/files/2010/09/1st-International-Neuroscience-and-Religious-Studies-Conference-Brain.-Mind.-Religion..pdf L2 - http://www.bu.edu/gdrs/files/2010/09/1st-International-Neuroscience-and-Religious-Studies-Conference-Brain.-Mind.-Religion..pdf N2 - Rituals exist in every human society, and despite incredible cross-cultural diversity, there are several fundamental features common to the majority of them. At the cultural level, rituals are associated with times of stress, and uncertainty. At the individual level, there exist universal “ritualized behaviors,” often assumed to assuage anxiety. Boyer and Liénard theorize that ritualized behaviors are the result of cognitive structures that urge diligent focus on ongoing actions whose activation results in anxiety reduction. The generally recognized characteristics of ritualized behavior are: non-functionality, rigidity, repetitiveness, and compulsiveness. We tested the hypothesis that anxious people engage in more repetitive, rigid and redundant behavioral movement. The results provide support for the hypothesis that anxious people display more repetitive and rigid movements. These findings can help to explain the occurrence of rituals and their purported connection to anxiety ER -
KRÁTKÝ, Jan. Inducing anxiety in laboratory setting results in ritualized behavior. In \textit{Brain, Mind and Religion: 1st International Neuroscience and Religious studies Conference}. 2015.
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