Publication | Closed Access
The effects of attentional training on physiological stress recovery after induced social threat
23
Citations
25
References
2011
Year
Physiological Stress RecoveryBiofeedbackAffective NeuroscienceEducationSocial ThreatAttentionSocial SciencesPsychologyEmotion RegulationStressStress ManagementBehavioral SciencesHeart Rate VariabilitySocial StressMindfulnessAttentional TrainingWork-related StressEmotionAdaptive Emotion
Social stress has been related to both physiological and psychological responses. The recovery of stress is influenced by the way environmental information is processed, i.e., what information is attended to and how it is interpreted. The present study investigated the effect of attention modification training on physiological stress recovery following induced stress. A group of applicants preparing for a job interview were randomly allocated to an attention training condition versus a control condition. Afterwards, they were asked to give an artificial job interview to a real life jury while being videotaped. Participants in both conditions showed decreased heart rate variability during the job interview, which indicates an overall physiological stress response. However, during a 30-minute follow-up period after the training, indices of heart rate variability showed improved stress recovery only in the attention training condition. Attentional training is proposed as a promising strategy to prevent enduring stress reactions.
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