Abstract
Lazarus has proposed that palliative defenses against threat that interfere with direct efforts to alleviate the threat may prove maladaptive. Three evasive cognitive attributes that circumvent awareness of threat were studied to determine whether they related to the prevalence of stress symptoms in college students. Repression (selective forgetting of threatening material), awareness of the repressive defense, and internal scanning (breadth of association to cues) were considered. College students of both sexes who engaged in evasive cognitive activity reported more stress symptoms than those who did not, with a progressive increase in stress as increasingly homogeneous groups were considered. Students who defended themselves by repression experienced more stress than those who did not. Repressors who were the least aware of their use of this defense reported even more stress. Unconscious repressors who were the least reflective (narrow scanners) showed the highest frequency of stress symptoms.