Fear Psychology: A Concise List of 30+ Human Phobias

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Surprising fact: Your brain takes just 74 milliseconds to detect a snake in your field of vision – faster than recognizing a happy face.

That lightning-quick response shows how deeply fear shapes our survival instincts.

Another surprise: Your genes influence about 30% of your fear responses. The remaining 70% comes from your experiences and what you learn from others.

Studies find that 44% of panic disorders, 39% of agoraphobia, and around 30% of anxiety disorders and specific phobias (as to spiders, snakes, holes in hand, and blood) are heritable.

Phobias generally show about a three-fold increase in first-degree relatives (study).

Fear vs. Phobia

Fear is a natural response to a hostile environment. It is your brain’s built-in alarm system, triggered by your amygdala – a small almond-shaped structure in your brain. This reaction happens before your conscious mind can fully process the threat.

Phobias work differently — they are unreasonable fears. A phobia turns ordinary objects or situations into sources of intense or irrational fear. Someone with a phobia feels utter panic at the mere thought of their object of phobia. Their brain treats it as a life-threatening danger, even when they know this reaction makes little sense.

list of all types of phobias

A Concise List of 30+ Human Phobias

Scientists group phobias into five main categories:

1. Natural Environment Phobias

  • Hydrophobia — Fear of water
  • Acrophobia — Fear of heights
  • Heliophobia — Fear of the sun
  • Nyctophobia — Fear of darkness or night
  • Astraphobia/Brontophobia — Fear of lightning and thunder
  • Thalassophobia — Fear of large bodies of water, as ocean, lakes, or seas

2. Animal Phobias

  • Cynophobia — Fear of dogs
  • Entomophobia — Fear of insects
  • Ophidiophobia — Fear of snakes
  • Arachnophobia — Fear of spiders

3. Health-Related Phobias

  • Hemophobia — Fear of blood
  • Trypanophobia — Fear of needles
  • Thanatophobia — Fear of death or dying
  • Tomophobia — Fear of medical procedures
  • Mysophobia — Fear of germs or contamination
  • Trypophobia — Fear of tightly packed clusters of small holes

4. Situational Phobias

  • Aerophobia — Fear of flying
  • Vehophobia — Fear of driving
  • Autophobia — Fear of being alone
  • Claustrophobia — Fear of enclosed spaces
  • Agoraphobia — Fear of open spaces or crowded places

5. Social Phobias

  • Glossophobia — Fear of public speaking
  • Deipnophobia — Fear of eating in public
  • Social Anxiety Disorder — Fear of social situations
  • Metathesiophobia — Fear of change and the unknown

New Phobias

Scientists keep discovering and naming new phobias:

  • nomophobia (no-mobile-phone phobia) — the fear and anxiety of being without a mobile phone.
  • pocrescophobia or obesophobia — an intense fear of gaining weight
  • gerascophobia — an excessive fear of aging
  • coulrophobia — a fear of clowns
Psychological Fear of costumed characters like Evil Joker
Coulrophobia: Psychological Fear of Evil Clowns

2 Types of Fears

  • Innate fears: Evolutionary fears that are passed down through generations. These are universal.
  • Learned fears: Fears learned from personal or societal experiences. These affect only certain people.
Type of FearInnate FearLearned Fear
NatureEvolutionary and instinctualLearned from experiences or influences
OnsetImmediate and sub-consciousGradually acquired over time
UniversalityUniversal, commonly shared fearsVaries widely among people and cultures
PurposePrimarily for immediate survival and avoidance of harmOften related to complex social, cultural, personal, or environmental factors
ChangeabilityGenerally consistent throughout lifeChanges with new experiences or insights

Some Innate Fears:

  • Fear of Loud Sounds: You jump at sudden, sharp noises. This response starts working just 10 days after birth.
  • Fear of Heights: Your heart races when you look down from a tall building. Babies as young as 6 months show this fear.
  • Fear of Snakes: People spot snake shapes faster than other objects. This quick detection helped early humans avoid deadly bites.

Some Learned Fears:

  • Fear of Flying: Despite air travel’s safety, bad flights or news stories can trigger this fear.
  • Fear of Doctors: Some people develop this fear after difficult medical experiences.
  • Fear of Public Speaking: This stems from past embarrassment or social pressure.

Known Fears vs. Unknown Fears

  • Fear of the known, like fear of escalators, has clear boundaries. You know exactly what scares you, so you can prepare for (or avoid) it.
  • Fear of the unknown, like fear of change of place or job, creates a complex kind of stress. Since the threats are undefined, your brain struggles to plan for them, making these fears feel more overwhelming.

Find out how to face your fears head on, instead of avoiding them.

Final Words

  • Animal phobias typically start in childhood.
  • Situational phobias often develop after age 20.
  • Social phobias usually begin in the teenage years.

√ Also Read: From Science, Help Your Modern Brain Handle Your Fear

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