Authors
David S Krantz, David C Glass, Melvin L Snyder
Publication date
1974/5/1
Journal
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Volume
10
Issue
3
Pages
284-300
Publisher
Academic Press
Description
Two experiments were conducted to examine the relationship between stress level and learned helplessness in human subjects. Experiment I subjected subjects to loud or moderate noise in order to induce differential stress. Half of the subjects within each stress group were unable to escape from a series of noise bursts, whereas the other half could terminate each burst by manipulating appropriate switches. After the pretreatment series, the same noise was again delivered to subjects, all of whom could now escape or avoid noise by making an appropriate response on a shuttle box. Inescapable (helplessness) pretreatment interfered with escape learning in the second (test) phase of the study under both levels of stress. Experiment II was a partial replication of the first study using only loud noise. The interference effect during test trials was greater than in the first study. In addition to these findings, measures of a …
Total citations
198519861987198819891990199119921993199419951996199719981999200020012002200320042005200620072008200920102011201220132014201520162017201820192020202120222023202433322635348141213104117899688345613210236545532431
Scholar articles
DS Krantz, DC Glass, ML Snyder - Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 1974