Davey's mediational hypothesis [Davey, G. C. L. (1994). Self-reported fears
to common indigenous animals in an adult UK population: the role of disgus
t sensitivity. British Journal of Psychology, 85, 541-554.] suggests that t
he sex difference in self-assessed animal fears can be accounted for by the
sex difference in disgust sensitivity. An empirical test failed to support
this hypothesis in a non-clinical sample (N = 214), Holding constant the i
nfluences of confounders such as age, fear of contamination, sex roles, neu
roticism, psychoticism and disgust sensitivity, biological sex kept emergin
g as a significant predictor in relation to four types of animal fears (fea
r-relevant animals, dry or non-slimy invertebrates, slimy or wet looking an
imals and farm animals). Other things being equal, high disgust sensitivity
either lost its predictive capability (in relation to dry or non-slimy inv
ertebrates and slimy or wet looking animals) or predicted high fear of fear
-relevant animals and of farm animals inequivalently across, respectively,
the sexes (high in females only) and age groups (high in the old only). A m
ultifactorial, interactionist approach should be advocated in the study of
the aetiology of animal fears if progress in this area is to be achieved. (
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