Treatment of severe intensive phobia 1. Exposure therapy is forcing patients to accept things that cause them fear. The patient was greatly stimulated psychologically before he was suddenly exposed to fear. If successful, the patient will establish a new understanding of the impression of fear and understand that fear is unnecessary.
2. What is the basic principle of Morita therapy? Let it be. Let nature take its course is to accept and obey the objective laws of things, which can eventually break the psychological interaction of neurosis patients. Let nature take its course requires the first method to be very effective, but it is not recommended, which will cause serious psychological obstacles to people who are too sensitive. The reason or the reason? One? Split into? how much is it? It is related to the materialized memory of the virtual body.
3. Drug control. Controlled by sedatives. It is suitable for patients with particularly serious intensive phobia.
Type of intensive phobia 1, depression intensive:
Lotus milk and empty finger belong to this category, as do many other synthetic images circulating on the Internet, perhaps because this category can bring people the greatest degree of dense fear. Depression is dense, its condition is three-dimensional, and then there are many holes in one face, and there may or may not be anything in the holes (such as lotus seed milk). According to everyone's reaction, there will be a desire to dig a hole when you see such a scene.
2. Aircraft density:
This density brings people less fear, and sometimes even no fear. Only a few people are afraid. For example, a piece of paper is painted with ants (El Salvador? There are often groups of ants in Dali's paintings. Or repeat a pattern on a piece of paper.
3. Highlight intensification:
For example, the trunk is covered with similar insects (ladybugs, beetles, spiders, etc.). ), and it may be stacked one on top of the other, which is very crowded. Another example is dense insect eggs. In Kenya Hara's Design in Design/Complete Works, there is a sentence on pages 76-77: The scene that jumps into your eyes is that a butterfly is laying eggs. Not only that, the eggs laid are densely arranged in neat geometric figures! Insect eggs, a creature, are symmetrically arranged on your elbow to surprise you.
The causes of intensive phobia First of all, from a psychological point of view, how to cause fear through specific visual characteristics is a very attractive topic. Generally speaking, the fear of non-social factors comes from looking at concrete things, such as snakes, spiders or cliffs. Human's fear of these things comes from the choice of these factors in the history of human evolution. But for intensive phobia, intensive? It is an abstract concept with its own characteristics. The theory of spider phobia or acrophobia can't explain the aversion to soap bubbles and porous cheese well, because soap and cheese will not harm people in evolutionary history or now. Cole's research results make people realize that abstract graphic features from specific toxic organisms can still induce fear, which may provide a new research angle for psychological research.
Secondly, human's aversion to dense visual features can enable designers to design their own products better and guide consumers' preference for products. For example, when designing jewelry or wallpaper, try to avoid patterns that may produce dense fear, so as to gain the favor of more consumers. In situations where anxiety and fear need to be expressed, these pattern features can be used to let the audience get the corresponding psychological experience.
Finally, back to the problem of intensive phobia itself, how to overcome this? A little by-product and? Perhaps Cole himself, a patient with intensive phobia, has given the answer: you can overcome intensive phobia by watching intensive pictures repeatedly until you are numb. However, in order to avoid psychological harm to intensive phobia patients, like this one used by Cole? Exposure therapy? It must also be used with relaxation exercises to gradually ease the fear.