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Neophobia

Neophobia is the fear of new things or experiences. It is also called cainotophobia. In psychology, neophobia is defined as the persistent and abnormal fear of anything new. In its milder form, it can manifest as the unwillingness to try new things or break from routine. more...

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The term is also used to describe anger, frustration or trepidation toward new things and toward change in general. Some conservative and reactionary groups are often described as neophobic, in their attempts to preserve traditions or revert society to a perceived past form. Technophobia can be seen as a specialized form of neophobia, by fearing new technology.

Robert Anton Wilson theorized, in his book Prometheus Rising, that neophobia is instinctual in people after they become parents and begin to raise children. Wilson's views on neophobia are mostly negative, believing that it is the reason human culture and ideas do not advance as quickly as our technology. His model includes an idea from Thomas Kuhn's The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, which is that new ideas, however well-proven and evident, are implemented only when the generations who consider them 'new' die and are replaced by generations who consider the ideas accepted and old.

Wilson assumes that people do not think most of the time, and believes that the rational mind usually justifies instinctual activity rather than actually drive action.

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Maybe what Polly wants is a new toy - Parrots - Brief Article
From Science News, 8/2/03

Changing the toys frequently in a parrot's cage may reduce the bird's tendency to fear new things. Bird keepers grow anxious as their birds fidget, sometimes plucking their own feathers, says Rebecca Fox of the University of California, Davis. The fearfulness, or neophobia, also raises questions about bird development.

Research in rats linked neophobia to early separation from Mom, but experiments found no such link for parrots. Other studies even showed that nestlings fed by people were less afraid of new things until age 6 months than were birds reared by their parents. The effect doesn't last, though, and the hand-reared birds by 1 year of age show the typical neophobia.

Fox wondered whether hand rearing delayed neophobia because it exposed birds to extra novelty. Fox and James R. Millam of U.C.-Davis divided 32 young orange-winged Amazon parrots into two groups. For one group, she replaced two novel objects in their cages five times a week; parrots in the other group kept the same toys. After 11 weeks, she switched treatments.

To measure neophobia, she filled a dish with peanuts and apples, a treat that she calls "the Amazon equivalent of chocolate," then dangled an unfamiliar object above it and timed a bird's delay in approaching. The weeks of frequent toy changing brought a "moderate but significant" easing of neophobia, she reports. The frequent-change birds approached in about 6 minutes instead of 10 minutes.

Fox also found that some objects provoked more reaction than others. Of the 15 doodads she had purchased, three--a little stuffed pink elephant, a black plastic box, and a mesh shower puff--proved too scary to use in the experiments. "Not all novelty is equal," Fox says.--S.M.

COPYRIGHT 2003 Science Service, Inc.
COPYRIGHT 2003 Gale Group

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