Title |
Extraversion and cardiovascular responses to recurrent social stress: Effect of stress intensity
|
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Published in |
International Journal of Psychophysiology, October 2017
|
DOI | 10.1016/j.ijpsycho.2017.10.008 |
Pubmed ID | |
Authors |
Wei Lü, Wanying Xing, Brian M. Hughes, Zhenhong Wang |
Abstract |
The present study sought to establish whether the effects of extraversion on cardiovascular responses to recurrent social stress are contingent on stress intensity. A 2×5×1 mixed-factorial experiment was conducted, with social stress intensity as a between-subject variable, study phase as a within-subject variable, extraversion as a continuous independent variable, and cardiovascular parameter (HR, SBP, DBP, or RSA) as a dependent variable. Extraversion (NEO-FFI), subjective stress, and physiological stress were measured in 166 undergraduate students randomly assigned to undergo moderate (n=82) or high-intensity (n=84) social stress (a public speaking task with different levels of social evaluation). All participants underwent continuous physiological monitoring while facing two consecutive stress exposures distributed across five laboratory phases: baseline, stress exposure 1, post-stress 1, stress exposure 2, post-stress 2. Results indicated that under moderate-intensity social stress, participants higher on extraversion exhibited lesser HR reactivity to stress than participants lower on extraversion, while under high-intensity social stress, they exhibited greater HR, SBP, DBP and RSA reactivity. Under both moderate- and high-intensity social stress, participants higher on extraversion exhibited pronounced SBP and DBP response adaption to repeated stress, and showed either better degree of HR recovery or greater amount of SBP and DBP recovery after stress. These findings suggest that individuals higher on extraversion exhibit physiological flexibility to cope with social challenges and benefit from adaptive cardiovascular responses. |
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Geographical breakdown
Country | Count | As % |
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Unknown | 46 | 100% |
Demographic breakdown
Readers by professional status | Count | As % |
---|---|---|
Student > Ph. D. Student | 6 | 13% |
Student > Bachelor | 6 | 13% |
Researcher | 4 | 9% |
Student > Doctoral Student | 3 | 7% |
Student > Master | 3 | 7% |
Other | 5 | 11% |
Unknown | 19 | 41% |
Readers by discipline | Count | As % |
---|---|---|
Psychology | 14 | 30% |
Medicine and Dentistry | 5 | 11% |
Nursing and Health Professions | 3 | 7% |
Business, Management and Accounting | 1 | 2% |
Sports and Recreations | 1 | 2% |
Other | 3 | 7% |
Unknown | 19 | 41% |