Cardiovascular and neuroendocrine adjustment to public speaking and mental arithmetic stressors

被引:346
作者
AlAbsi, M [1 ]
Bongard, S [1 ]
Buchanan, T [1 ]
Pincomb, GA [1 ]
Licinio, J [1 ]
Lovallo, WR [1 ]
机构
[1] NIMH, BETHESDA, MD 20892 USA
关键词
interpersonal stress; public speaking; cortisol; ACTH; blood pressure; hemodynamic adjustment;
D O I
10.1111/j.1469-8986.1997.tb02397.x
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
In this study, we evaluated cardiovascular, neuroendocrine, and psychological adjustment to repeated presentations of a public speaking and a mental arithmetic task. Brief versions of mental arithmetic tasks have been used widely in previous reactivity studies, and growing attention to more socially salient tasks has led to the increased use of public speaking tasks. However, psychophysiological adjustment during extended and repeated exposure to these tasks has not been delineated. In the present study, 52 healthy men worked on three 8-min presentations of public speaking and of mental arithmetic in a repeated measure design. Both tasks produced substantial cardiovascular, adrenocorticotropic hormone, and cortisol responses; public speaking produced greater changes. Repeated presentations of public speaking produced a stable pattern of cardiac activation, whereas repetitions of the mental arithmetic initially produced large cardiac responses that changed to a more vascular tonus across task periods. Both tasks increased negative moods. However, correlations between the endocrine, cardiovascular, and negative moods were significant only during the public speaking stressor. The public speaking task is a socially relevant experimental protocol for studying reactivity in the laboratory setting and elicits relatively high, stable, and homogeneous responses.
引用
收藏
页码:266 / 275
页数:10
相关论文
共 51 条
[31]  
KRANTZ DS, 1991, PERSP BEH M, P11
[32]  
Lovallo W. R., 1992, INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENC, P265
[33]   HEART-RATE REACTIVITY AS A PREDICTOR OF NEUROENDOCRINE RESPONSES TO AVERSIVE AND APPETITIVE CHALLENGES [J].
LOVALLO, WR ;
PINCOMB, GA ;
BRACKETT, DJ ;
WILSON, MF .
PSYCHOSOMATIC MEDICINE, 1990, 52 (01) :17-26
[34]   IMPEDANCE CARDIOGRAPHY USED TO ASSESS PATTERNS OF CARDIOVASCULAR-RESPONSE TO BEHAVIORAL STRESSORS [J].
LOVALLO, WR ;
PINCOMB, GA ;
SUNG, BH ;
WILSON, MF .
BIOLOGICAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1993, 36 (1-2) :97-105
[35]   THE EFFECTS OF TALKING ON THE BLOOD-PRESSURE OF HYPERTENSIVE AND NORMOTENSIVE INDIVIDUALS [J].
LYNCH, JJ ;
LONG, JM ;
THOMAS, SA ;
MALINOW, KL ;
KATCHER, AH .
PSYCHOSOMATIC MEDICINE, 1981, 43 (01) :25-33
[36]  
Manuck S B, 1994, Int J Behav Med, V1, P4, DOI 10.1207/s15327558ijbm0101_2
[37]   DO CARDIOVASCULAR-RESPONSES TO LABORATORY STRESS RELATE TO AMBULATORY BLOOD-PRESSURE LEVELS - YES, IN SOME OF THE PEOPLE, SOME OF THE TIME [J].
MATTHEWS, KA ;
OWENS, JF ;
ALLEN, MT ;
STONEY, CM .
PSYCHOSOMATIC MEDICINE, 1992, 54 (06) :686-697
[38]  
McNair DM, 1971, MANUAL PROFILE MOOD
[39]   PSYCHOLOGIC STRESS INCREASES PLASMA-LEVELS OF PROLACTIN, CORTISOL, AND POMC-DERIVED PEPTIDES IN MAN [J].
MEYERHOFF, JL ;
OLESHANSKY, MA ;
MOUGEY, EH .
PSYCHOSOMATIC MEDICINE, 1988, 50 (03) :295-303
[40]   EXAGGERATED SYMPATHETIC NERVOUS-SYSTEM RESPONSE TO EXTENDED PSYCHOLOGICAL STRESS IN OFFSPRING OF HYPERTENSIVES [J].
MILLER, SB ;
DITTO, B .
PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 1991, 28 (01) :103-113