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Dive into the research topics where Omri Gillath is active.

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Featured researches published by Omri Gillath.


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 2002

Activation of the attachment system in adulthood: threat-related primes increase the accessibility of mental representations of attachment figures.

Mario Mikulincer; Omri Gillath; Phillip R. Shaver

Three studies explored the effects of subliminal threat on the activation of representations of attachment figures. This accessibility was measured in a lexical decision task and a Stroop task following threat- or neutral-word primes, and was compared with the accessibility of representations of other close persons, known but not close persons, and unknown persons. Participants also reported on their attachment style. Threat primes led to increased accessibility of representations of attachment figures. This effect was specific to attachment figures and was replicated across tasks and experiments. Attachment anxiety heightened accessibility of representations of attachment figures even in neutral contexts, whereas attachment avoidance inhibited this activation when the threat prime was the word separation. These effects were not, explained by trait anxiety. The discussion focuses on the dynamics of attachment-system activation in adulthood.


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 2005

Attachment, caregiving, and altruism: boosting attachment security increases compassion and helping.

Mario Mikulincer; Phillip R. Shaver; Omri Gillath; Rachel A. Nitzberg

Recent studies based on J. Bowlbys (1969/1982) attachment theory reveal that both dispositional and experimentally enhanced attachment security facilitate cognitive openness and empathy, strengthen self-transcendent values, and foster tolerance of out-group members. Moreover, dispositional attachment security is associated with volunteering to help others in everyday life and to unselfish motives for volunteering. The present article reports 5 experiments, replicated in 2 countries (Israel and the United States), testing the hypothesis that increases in security (accomplished through both implicit and explicit priming techniques) foster compassion and altruistic behavior. The hypothesized effects were consistently obtained, and various alternative explanations were explored and ruled out. Dispositional attachment-related anxiety and avoidance adversely influenced compassion, personal distress, and altruistic behavior in theoretically predictable ways. As expected, attachment security provides a foundation for care-oriented feelings and caregiving behaviors, whereas various forms of insecurity suppress or interfere with compassionate caregiving.


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 2006

When sex is more than just sex : Attachment orientations, sexual experience, and relationship quality

Gurit E. Birnbaum; Harry T. Reis; Mario Mikulincer; Omri Gillath; Ayala Orpaz

The authors explored the contribution of individual differences in attachment orientations to the experience of sexual intercourse and its association with relationship quality. In Study 1, 500 participants completed self-report scales of attachment orientations and sexual experience. The findings indicated that whereas attachment anxiety was associated with an ambivalent construal of sexual experience, attachment avoidance was associated with more aversive sexual feelings and cognitions. In Study 2, 41 couples reported on their attachment orientations and provided daily diary measures of sexual experiences and relationship interactions for a period of 42 days. Results showed that attachment anxiety amplified the effects of positive and negative sexual experiences on relationship interactions. In contrast, attachment avoidance inhibited the positive relational effect of having sex and the detrimental relational effects of negative sexual interactions. The authors discuss the possibility that attachment orientations are associated with different sex-related strategies and goals within romantic relationships.


Accident Analysis & Prevention | 2004

THE MULTIDIMENSIONAL DRIVING STYLE INVENTORY - SCALE CONSTRUCT AND VALIDATION

Orit Taubman-Ben-Ari; Mario Mikulincer; Omri Gillath

Two studies were conducted in order to develop a multidimensional instrument of driving style. In Study 1, we developed a self-report scale assessing four broad domains of driving style-the multidimensional driving style inventory (MDSI). A factor analysis revealed eight main factors, each one representing a specific driving style--dissociative, anxious, risky, angry, high-velocity, distress reduction, patient, and careful. In addition, significant associations were found between the eight factors, on the one hand, and gender, age, driving history, and personality measures of self-esteem, need for control, impulsive sensation seeking, and extraversion, on the other. In Study 2, further associations were found between the eight driving style factors and measures of trait anxiety and neuroticism. The discussion focused on the validity and utility of a multidimensional conceptualization of driving style.


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 2001

The affective component of the secure base schema : Affective priming with representations of attachment security

Mario Mikulincer; Gilad Hirschberger; Orit Nachmias; Omri Gillath

Using an affective priming procedure (S. T. Murphy & R. B. Zajonc, 1993), 7 studies examined the effects of the contextual activation of representations of attachment security (secure base schema) on the evaluation of neutral stimuli under either neutral or stressful contexts. In all the studies, participants also reported on their attachment style. Results indicated that the subliminal priming of secure base representations led to more positive affective reactions to neutral stimuli than did the subliminal priming of neutral or no pictures under both neutral and stressful contexts. Although the subliminal priming of positively valued, attachment-unrelated representations heightened positive evaluations under neutral contexts, it failed to elicit positive affect under stressful contexts. The results also revealed interesting effects of attachment style. The discussion focuses on the affective component of the secure base schema.


Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin | 2008

Genetic Correlates of Adult Attachment Style

Omri Gillath; Phillip R. Shaver; Jong-Min Baek; David S. Chun

Attachment theory attempts to explain effects of social experiences, not genes, on personality development. Most studies of the development of attachment insecurities support this emphasis on social experiences rather than genes, although there are exceptions. In the present study, the authors examine associations between attachment insecurities and particular genetic polymorphisms related to emotions and social behavior. They find that (a) anxious attachment is associated with a polymorphism of the DRD2 dopamine receptor gene, (b) avoidant attachment is associated with a polymorphism of the 5HT2A serotonin receptor gene, and (c) the rs53576 A polymorphism of the OXTR oxytocin receptor gene is not associated with attachment insecurities. These findings suggest that attachment insecurities are partially explained by particular genes, although there is still a great deal of individual difference variance that remains to be explained by other genes or social experiences.


Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin | 2008

Avoiding Interference: Adult Attachment and Emotional Processing Biases

Robin S. Edelstein; Omri Gillath

The present study investigated attachment-related differences in emotional processing biases. Consistent with the proposal that avoidant individuals limit attention to potentially distressing information, attachment avoidance was associated with reductions in emotional Stroop (ES) interference for attachment-related words (e.g., intimate, loss). These biases were strongest among individuals who were currently in a romantic relationship, suggesting that being in a close relationship may activate avoidant defensive strategies. In addition, avoidant attentional biases were attenuated under cognitive load, suggesting that inhibiting attention to attachment-related information requires cognitive effort. Finally, avoidance was unrelated to ES performance for emotional, nonattachment-related words, demonstrating the specificity of these attentional biases. The present findings suggest that avoidant individuals can inhibit attention to potentially threatening information, that this ability requires cognitive effort, and that relationship status may be an important moderator of avoidant defensive strategies. The implications of these strategies for emotional functioning and well-being are discussed.


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 2010

Attachment, authenticity, and honesty: Dispositional and experimentally induced security can reduce self- and other-deception.

Omri Gillath; Amanda K. Sesko; Phillip R. Shaver; David S. Chun

Attachment security is hypothesized to promote authenticity and sincerity, or honesty, whereas insecurity is hypothesized to increase various forms of inauthenticity and dishonesty. The authors tested these ideas in 8 studies of dispositional and situational attachment insecurities and their influence on inauthenticity and dishonesty. The first 4 studies showed that authenticity is related to scoring low on the 2 dimensions of dispositional attachment insecurity-anxiety and avoidance-and that these 2 dimensions are associated with different aspects of inauthenticity. The first set of studies also showed that conscious and unconscious security priming increased state authenticity (compared with neutral or insecurity priming). The last 4 studies showed that attachment insecurity is related to dishonesty (lying and cheating) and that security priming reduces the tendency to lie or cheat and does so more effectively than positive mood priming. Implications for understanding the role of authenticity and inauthenticity in various relationship contexts are discussed.


Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin | 2006

Automatic Activation of Attachment-Related Goals

Omri Gillath; Mario Mikulincer; Gráinne M. Fitzsimons; Phillip R. Shaver; Dory A. Schachner; John A. Bargh

When people encounter threats, their attachment systems are activated and they become motivated to seek protection and support through proximity to their attachment figures. Theoretically, therefore, mental representations of attachment figures should be associated with goals related to attaining proximity and safety. The present studies explore this idea by examining the effects of a persons chronic attachment style and exposure to a particular attachment figures name on the automatic activation of attachment-related goals. Studies 1 and 2 examine effects of exposure to the name of a security-providing attachment figure on willingness to self-disclose and seek support (two behaviors related to gaining proximity). Study 3 examines how exposure to names of different relationship partners (with whom a participant has felt secure, anxious, or avoidant) affects the mental accessibility of attachment-related goal words. Taken together, the studies support the idea that mental representations of attachment figures are associated with attachment-related goals.


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 2006

The siren's call: terror management and the threat of men's sexual attraction to women.

Mark J. Landau; Jamie L. Goldenberg; Jeff Greenberg; Omri Gillath; Sheldon Solomon; Cathy R. Cox; Andy Martens; Tom Pyszczynski

Why do sexually appealing women often attract derogation and aggression? According to terror management theory, womens sexual allure threatens to increase mens awareness of their corporeality and thus mortality. Accordingly, in Study 1 a subliminal mortality prime decreased mens but not womens attractiveness ratings of alluring women. In Study 2, mortality salience (MS) led men to downplay their sexual intent toward a sexy woman. In Study 3, MS decreased mens interest in a seductive but not a wholesome woman. In Study 4, MS decreased mens but not womens attraction to a sexy opposite-sex target. In Study 5, MS and a corporeal lust prime increased mens tolerance of aggression toward women. Discussion focuses on mortality concerns and male sexual ambivalence.

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Mario Mikulincer

Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya

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Melanie Canterberry

Medical University of South Carolina

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Gurit E. Birnbaum

Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya

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Emre Selcuk

Middle East Technical University

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