posted on 2021-08-26, 08:11authored bySiobhán M. Griffin, Siobhán Howard
Instructed reappraisal has previously been associated with a challenge-oriented cardiovascular response profile, indexed by greater cardiac output (CO) and lower total
peripheral resistance (TPR), in response to a single stress exposure. The present study
builds on this research by employing a stress habituation paradigm where participants
completed a speech task twice; in which prior to the second task participants heard
reappraisal instructions (i.e., view feelings of stress arousal as something that is beneficial) or control instructions. This paradigm allowed us to (a) test if reappraisal aids
cardiovascular habituation to recurrent stress, and (b) examine if reappraisal leads
to a within-participant change in CO/TPR responding from an uninstructed task to
an instructed reappraisal task. Habitual use of reappraisal was assessed using the
Emotion Regulation Questionnaire. The analyses report upon 173 young adults (121
women, 52 men). Cardiovascular parameters were measured continuously using the
Finometer Pro. All participants demonstrated similar cardiovascular habituation during the second stress exposure (lower SBP, CO, and HR); suggesting that reappraisal
did not aid cardiovascular habituation to recurrent stress. Reappraisal instructions
did not lead to a challenge-oriented response compared to both the control group and
responses to the uninstructed task. This study is the first to examine the relationship
between instructed reappraisal and cardiovascular habituation and identifies that habitual use of reappraisal does not interact with reappraisal instructions to influence
cardiovascular responses to stress.
Funding
Using the Cloud to Streamline the Development of Mobile Phone Apps