Publication | Open Access
Psychological stress, appraisal, emotion and Cardiovascular response in a public speaking task
167
Citations
39
References
2004
Year
Stressor AnticipationSpeech TaskAffective NeuroscienceMental HealthSocial SciencesPsychologyEmotional ResponseEmotion RegulationCardiovascular ResponseStress ManagementBehavioral SciencesPsychiatryCardiovascular ReactivityCv ResponseSocial StressSpeech CommunicationPsychological StressWork-related StressPublic Speaking TaskSpeech PerceptionMedicineEmotionAdaptive Emotion
Forty-three undergraduates (30 males, 13 females) prepared and performed a speech task (stressor) or a reading task (no-stressor control). Preparing to speak led to greater threat appraisal, negative emotion, and cardiovascular (CV) response than preparing to read aloud, particularly in speech anxious individuals. Delivering the speech, however, did not result in an increment in CV response over and above preparation. Although threat appraisals could not explain the effect of stress on CV response during task preparation, negative emotion accounted for over half of the effect. These data support the hypothesis that CV response in these studies is at least partially accounted for by psychological processes (stressor-specific anxiety and negative emotional response) and suggests that these processes may be best studied during a period of stressor anticipation.
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