University of Limerick
Browse
- No file added yet -

Life event stress is associated with blunted cardiovascular responding to both personally salient and personally non-salient laboratory tasks

Download (223.16 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2024-09-19, 11:10 authored by Siobhán HowardSiobhán Howard, Stephen GallagherStephen Gallagher, Annie T. Ginty, Anna C. Whittaker

Life event stress has been associated with blunted cardiovascular reactivity to acute psychological stress. However, recent studies have suggested that blunted reactivity to stress only arises when the laboratory tasks are not personally salient to the individual. We re-analyzed data from 136 healthy young adults where we had previously reported a negative association between life event stress and car?diovascular reactivity to two combined stressors. Participants completed a mental arithmetic task and a personally salient speech task, following a formal baseline period with Finometer-assessed cardiovascular parameters. The reanalyses ex?amined reactivity to the verbal mental arithmetic (personally non-salient) and speech (personally salient) tasks separately and found that life event stress was negatively associated with diastolic blood pressure reactivity, to both the person?ally non-salient, β = −.20, p = .023, and personally salient stressors, β = −.24, p = .004. Life event stress was negatively associated with systolic blood pressure reactivity to the personally salient stressor only, β = −.20, p = .021, and was not associated with heart rate reactivity. This study provides evidence against the argument that blunted reactivity to stress emerges as a result of stressor context, with findings indicating that low reactors show lower reactivity to both person?ally salient and personally non-salient stress.

History

Publication

Psychophysiology, 2023, 60, e14199

Publisher

Wiley and Sons

Other Funding information

Open access funding provided by IReL

Also affiliated with

  • Health Research Institute (HRI)

Sustainable development goals

  • (3) Good Health and Well-being

Department or School

  • Psychology

Usage metrics

    University of Limerick

    Categories

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC