INDIVIDUAL-DIFFERENCES IN THE PERCEPTION OF BODILY SENSATIONS - THE ROLE OF TRAIT ANXIETY AND COPING STYLE

被引:91
作者
STEPTOE, A [1 ]
VOGELE, C [1 ]
机构
[1] UNIV MARBURG,FACHBEREICH PSYCHOL,W-3550 MARBURG,GERMANY
关键词
D O I
10.1016/0005-7967(92)90005-2
中图分类号
B849 [应用心理学];
学科分类号
040203 ;
摘要
Thirty young women participated in an experiment in which heart rate, blood pressure, respiration rate, skin conductance level and palmar sweat index were monitored at rest and during the administration of mental arithmetic, mirror drawing and cold pressor tasks. The accuracy of perception of somatic states was estimated by calculating within-subject correlations between four bodily sensations (racing heart, high blood pressure, shortness of breath and sweaty hands) and corresponding physiological parameters, assessed on eight occasions during the experiment. The accuracy of heart rate perception was highest, with a mean correlation between actual heart rate and ratings of racing heart of 0.76 and 66% of participants showing significant within-subject effects. The mean accuracy was 0.55 for systolic blood pressure, 0.48 for respiration rate, 0.47 for skin conductance level, and 0.64 for palmar sweat index. Accurate perception across physiological parameters did not cluster within individuals, and was not dependent on the range either of physiological changes or sensation ratings. Trait anxiety was not significantly associated with accuracy of somatic perception. Subjects with high trait anxiety reported larger increases in shortness of breath during tasks than did low anxious subjects, but this was not reflected in objective physiological measures. Information-seeking coping style, indexed by the monitoring scale of the Miller Behavioral Style Scale, was related to the accuracy of perception of skin conductance level and heart rate. The use of within-subject correlational strategies for assessing individual differences in perception of bodily states is discussed.
引用
收藏
页码:597 / 607
页数:11
相关论文
共 47 条
[1]  
Barlow D.H., 2002, ANXIETY ITS DISORDER
[2]  
BARLOW DH, 1985, J ABNORM PSYCHOL, V94, P3200
[3]   THE AMPLIFICATION OF SOMATIC SYMPTOMS [J].
BARSKY, AJ ;
GOODSON, JD ;
LANE, RS ;
CLEARY, PD .
PSYCHOSOMATIC MEDICINE, 1988, 50 (05) :510-519
[4]  
BARSKY AJ, 1983, AM J PSYCHIAT, V140, P273
[6]   INTEROCEPTIVE DISCRIMINATION IN INTACT HUMANS - DETECTION OF CARDIAC ACTIVITY [J].
BRENER, J ;
JONES, JM .
PHYSIOLOGY & BEHAVIOR, 1974, 13 (06) :763-767
[7]   ASSESSMENT OF FEAR OF FEAR IN AGORAPHOBICS - THE BODY SENSATIONS QUESTIONNAIRE AND THE AGORAPHOBIC COGNITIONS QUESTIONNAIRE [J].
CHAMBLESS, DL ;
CAPUTO, GC ;
BRIGHT, P ;
GALLAGHER, R .
JOURNAL OF CONSULTING AND CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1984, 52 (06) :1090-1097
[8]   BEYOND ATTENTIONAL STRATEGIES - A COGNITIVE PERCEPTUAL MODEL OF SOMATIC INTERPRETATION [J].
CIOFFI, D .
PSYCHOLOGICAL BULLETIN, 1991, 109 (01) :25-41
[9]   A COGNITIVE APPROACH TO PANIC [J].
CLARK, DM .
BEHAVIOUR RESEARCH AND THERAPY, 1986, 24 (04) :461-470
[10]   ANXIETY INDUCED BY FALSE HEART-RATE FEEDBACK IN PATIENTS WITH PANIC DISORDER [J].
EHLERS, A ;
MARGRAF, J ;
ROTH, WT ;
TAYLOR, CB ;
BIRBAUMER, N .
BEHAVIOUR RESEARCH AND THERAPY, 1988, 26 (01) :1-11