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Blood pressure and heart rate responses to an intrusion on personal space
28
Citations
16
References
2003
Year
HypertensionPhysical ActivityWearable TechnologyPsychologySocial SciencesBlood PressureKinesiologyPsychophysiologyPublic HealthHeart Rate ResponsesStress ReductionStress ManagementHealth SciencesHeart RateStress PsychologyAutonomic SystemPsychiatryWellness StudiesCardiovascular ReactivityPersonal SpaceSocial StressBlood Pressure ElevationsBody ComfortHuman MovementEmotionPsychopathology
Abstract: Yaezawa and Yoshida's (1981 ) findings on the effects of an intrusion on personal space were reinvestigated. Thirty‐five female students were confronted with the approach of a male stranger, and blood pressure (BP) and heart rate (HR) were monitored. Throughout the model's approach, HR showed a significant triphasic change (an initial decrease, a subsequent increase, and then a secondary decrease), whereas subjective feelings of anxiety and tension showed significant, gradual increases. These trends were similar to those of Yaezawa and Yoshida’s . Nonetheless, their explanation that the triphasic change in HR reflected once hightened and then relieved tension, which was incongruent with the subjective ratings, seemed questionable. As the BP elevated to a moderate degree in spite of the modest HR changes, total peripheral resistance must have been increasing during the model's approach. Blood pressure elevations via this sort of hemodynamic pressor mechanisms have often been reported when a person can only tolerate passively during exposure to stress. This seems to be the case in an intrusion on personal space.
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