Cardiovascular response to agreement and disagreement: towards explaining the beneficial effect of social support

Social support has been associated with reduced mortality and morbidity from a number of causes. To assess possible mechanisms of action relating to cardiovascular (CV) responsiveness, 90 male and female university students delivered a five-minute speech on a controversial topic to a same-sex lab...

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Main Author: Lenz, Joseph William
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/7484
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-74842018-01-05T17:33:43Z Cardiovascular response to agreement and disagreement: towards explaining the beneficial effect of social support Lenz, Joseph William Psychophysiology Acquiescence (Psychology) Compliance Cardiovascular system -- Psychophysiology Social support has been associated with reduced mortality and morbidity from a number of causes. To assess possible mechanisms of action relating to cardiovascular (CV) responsiveness, 90 male and female university students delivered a five-minute speech on a controversial topic to a same-sex laboratory confederate. Subjects were randomly assigned to one of three conditions in which the confederate either (a) agreed with the subject, (b) remained impassive (neutral), or (c) disagreed with the subject. Blood pressure (SBP and DBP) and heart rate (HR.) were monitored throughout the experiment. Self-report measures of state self-esteem and affective state were taken pre- and post-task, and reactions to the task were assessed with post-task self-report measures. Subjects reported strong differences in supportiveness of the confederate in the three conditions. Self-report data indicated increase in arousal during the speech (a finding synchronous with CV data), and they reported the Disagree condition to be less pleasant than the Agree condition. CV data were analyzed as a 2 x 3 (sex by experimental condition) repeated measures ANOVA assessing changes from baseline to speech task. Sex differences on CV measures matched patterns generally reported: Men had higher SBP and lower HR than women. All CV measures increased significantly and substantially during the speech task. HR was higher in the Disagree and Neutral conditions than in the Agree condition. SBP and DBP did not differ by condition. There were no sex by condition interactions; however, there was a trend towards men’s HR increasing more in the neutral condition and women’ more in the disagree condition. These data partially support earlier findings in similar experiments while suggesting that subtleties of context, task selection, and content of supportive interaction may have significant impact on the degree to which social support attenuates CV response to social stressors. Unanswered questions for future research are delineated, and implications for designing and implementing interventions that enhance social support are discussed. Arts, Faculty of Psychology, Department of Graduate 2009-04-22T21:55:34Z 2009-04-22T21:55:34Z 1995 1995-11 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/7484 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. 2848648 bytes application/pdf
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Psychophysiology
Acquiescence (Psychology)
Compliance
Cardiovascular system -- Psychophysiology
spellingShingle Psychophysiology
Acquiescence (Psychology)
Compliance
Cardiovascular system -- Psychophysiology
Lenz, Joseph William
Cardiovascular response to agreement and disagreement: towards explaining the beneficial effect of social support
description Social support has been associated with reduced mortality and morbidity from a number of causes. To assess possible mechanisms of action relating to cardiovascular (CV) responsiveness, 90 male and female university students delivered a five-minute speech on a controversial topic to a same-sex laboratory confederate. Subjects were randomly assigned to one of three conditions in which the confederate either (a) agreed with the subject, (b) remained impassive (neutral), or (c) disagreed with the subject. Blood pressure (SBP and DBP) and heart rate (HR.) were monitored throughout the experiment. Self-report measures of state self-esteem and affective state were taken pre- and post-task, and reactions to the task were assessed with post-task self-report measures. Subjects reported strong differences in supportiveness of the confederate in the three conditions. Self-report data indicated increase in arousal during the speech (a finding synchronous with CV data), and they reported the Disagree condition to be less pleasant than the Agree condition. CV data were analyzed as a 2 x 3 (sex by experimental condition) repeated measures ANOVA assessing changes from baseline to speech task. Sex differences on CV measures matched patterns generally reported: Men had higher SBP and lower HR than women. All CV measures increased significantly and substantially during the speech task. HR was higher in the Disagree and Neutral conditions than in the Agree condition. SBP and DBP did not differ by condition. There were no sex by condition interactions; however, there was a trend towards men’s HR increasing more in the neutral condition and women’ more in the disagree condition. These data partially support earlier findings in similar experiments while suggesting that subtleties of context, task selection, and content of supportive interaction may have significant impact on the degree to which social support attenuates CV response to social stressors. Unanswered questions for future research are delineated, and implications for designing and implementing interventions that enhance social support are discussed. === Arts, Faculty of === Psychology, Department of === Graduate
author Lenz, Joseph William
author_facet Lenz, Joseph William
author_sort Lenz, Joseph William
title Cardiovascular response to agreement and disagreement: towards explaining the beneficial effect of social support
title_short Cardiovascular response to agreement and disagreement: towards explaining the beneficial effect of social support
title_full Cardiovascular response to agreement and disagreement: towards explaining the beneficial effect of social support
title_fullStr Cardiovascular response to agreement and disagreement: towards explaining the beneficial effect of social support
title_full_unstemmed Cardiovascular response to agreement and disagreement: towards explaining the beneficial effect of social support
title_sort cardiovascular response to agreement and disagreement: towards explaining the beneficial effect of social support
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/7484
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