Search results for " STRESS"

showing 10 items of 3936 documents

Coping with competition: neuroendocrine responses and cognitive variables.

2008

Confronting another individual or group motivated by the same goal is a very frequent situation in human communities that occurs in many other species. Competitive interactions emerge as critical situations that shed light on the effects and consequences of social stress on health. But more important than the situation itself is the way it is interpreted by the subject. This "appraisal" involves cognitive processes that contribute to explaining the neuroendocrine response to these interactions, helping to understanding the vulnerability or resistance to their effects. In this review, we defend the need to study human competition within the social stress framework, while maintaining an evolu…

Social stressCoping (psychology)Competitive BehaviorCognitive NeuroscienceCognitionNeurosecretory SystemsBehavioral NeuroscienceNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyCognitive variablesPsychophysiologyCognitionSocial ClassSocial cognitionAdaptation PsychologicalHumansPsychologySocial BehaviorSocial psychologyStress PsychologicalCognitive psychologySocial statusNeuroscience and biobehavioral reviews
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Assessing Performance on an Evaluated Speaking Task

2018

Abstract. Coping with social stress involves cognitive perceptions and the activation of several physiological mechanisms. Our main purpose was to examine how psychological factors such as cognitive appraisal, and particularly self-efficacy, may affect psychophysiological reactivity to social stress and young people’s performance on an evaluated speaking task. Thirty-five university students (18 men and 17 women) were exposed to the Trier Social Stress Test (TSST) and a control condition in a counterbalanced order. Self-efficacy, several dimensions of trait anxiety related to social evaluation, and changes in state anxiety were assessed. Additionally, heart rate and heart rate variability …

Social stressCoping (psychology)PhysiologyGeneral Neuroscience05 social sciences050109 social psychologyCognitionDevelopmental psychology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologymedicineTrier social stress testHeart rate variabilityAnxiety0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesmedicine.symptomVagal tonePsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryCognitive appraisalClinical psychologyJournal of Psychophysiology
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Caracterización conductual y neuroinmune de la resiliencia al estrés social: Efectos reforzantes de la cocaína

2020

Numerosos estudios preclínicos han demostrado que el estrés social incrementa la vulnerabilidad a los efectos reforzantes de la cocaína. Sin embargo, los resultados obtenidos no son homogéneos, observándose siempre una subpoblación que no muestra dicho incremento. Utilizando el modelo de derrota social (DS) repetida en ratones, en este trabajo hemos querido caracterizar conductualmente a los ratones resilientes al incremento de los efectos reforzantes de la cocaína inducido por el estrés social. Utilizamos ratones adultos macho de la cepa C57/BL6 a los que sometimos al protocolo de DS repetida y tres semanas más tarde, realizamos el Condicionamiento de Preferencia de Lugar (CPL) inducido po…

Social stressCoping (psychology)business.industryAddictionmedia_common.quotation_subjectMedicine (miscellaneous)PhysiologyConditioned place preferenceSocial defeatPsychiatry and Mental healthAnimal modelHomogeneousMedicineConditioningbusinessmedia_common
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Methods for Evaluating the Interaction Between Social Stress and Environmental Enrichment in Animal Models of Nicotine Addiction

2019

The environmental enrichment (EE) paradigm has been evaluated as a means of counteracting some of the consequences of chronic stress in rodents as well as a model of protective environment against drug abuse development. In the present chapter, our main aim is to describe the models of EE and chronic social stress and how they can be applied jointly in order to evaluate the effects of early psychosocial stress in animals exposed of different environments (enriched environment or standard environment). Furthermore, both paradigms could be applied in animal models of nicotine addiction, so the guidelines for the application of a chronic oral nicotine treatment in mice will be described. The h…

Social stressEnvironmental enrichmentAddictionmedia_common.quotation_subjectmedicine.diseaseNicotine Addiction030227 psychiatryNicotineSubstance abuse03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinePsychosocial stressmedicineChronic stressPsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryClinical psychologymedia_commonmedicine.drug
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P-70REPEATED SOCIAL STRESS REVERSED ETHANOL-INDUCED CONDITIONED PLACE AVERSION IN MALE MICE

2015

Exposure to stressors can produce behavioural and neurochemical adaptations that render individuals more prone to drug-seeking and drug-taking behaviours. It is well know that stress experiences are a risk factor for alcohol abuse in humans and recent studies in animal models reported that repeated social stress increased alcohol consumption. The aim of the present work is to evaluate the long-term …

Social stressEthanolStressorPhysiologyAlcohol abuseMale miceGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseDevelopmental psychologychemistry.chemical_compoundNeurochemicalchemistrymedicineRisk factorPsychologyConditioned place aversionAlcohol and Alcoholism
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UBFC-Phys: A Multimodal Database For Psychophysiological Studies of Social Stress

2021

As humans, we experience social stress in countless everyday-life situations. Giving a speech in front of an audience, passing a job interview, and similar experiences all lead us to go through stress states that impact both our psychological and physiological states. Therefore, studying the link between stress and physiological responses had become a critical societal issue, and recently, research in this field has grown in popularity. However, publicly available datasets have limitations. In this article, we propose a new dataset, UBFC-Phys, collected with and without contact from participants living social stress situations. A wristband was used to measure contact blood volume pulse (BVP…

Social stressFacial expressionModalitiesComputer scienceSpeech recognition010401 analytical chemistryFeature extraction[INFO.INFO-CV]Computer Science [cs]/Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition [cs.CV]020206 networking & telecommunications02 engineering and technology01 natural sciencesField (computer science)0104 chemical sciencesHuman-Computer InteractionPsychophysiology[INFO.INFO-TS]Computer Science [cs]/Signal and Image ProcessingStress (linguistics)0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringTask analysisComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSSoftwareIEEE Transactions on Affective Computing
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N6 -Methyladenosine Modification in Chronic Stress Response Due to Social Hierarchy Positioning of Mice

2021

Appropriately responding to stressful events is essential for maintaining health and well-being of any organism. Concerning social stress, the response is not always as straightforward as reacting to physical stressors, e.g., extreme heat, and thus has to be balanced subtly. Particularly, regulatory mechanisms contributing to gaining resilience in the face of mild social stress are not fully deciphered yet. We employed an intrinsic social hierarchy stress paradigm in mice of both sexes to identify critical factors for potential coping strategies. While global transcriptomic changes could not be observed in male mice, several genes previously reported to be involved in synaptic plasticity, l…

Social stressMethyltransferase complexbehaviorQH301-705.5sex differenceStressorCell BiologyBiologydominancechemistry.chemical_compoundtranscriptomicschemistryCorticosteroneepigenetic modificationSynaptic plasticityChronic stressmethyltransferaseMRNA methylationN6-MethyladenosineBiology (General)NeuroscienceDevelopmental BiologyFrontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology
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Customer-related social stressors and service providers' affective reactions

2012

Summary Previous research has shown that customer-related social stressors (CSS) have negative effects on service providers' long-term well-being. Little is known, however, about short-term and mid-term affective stress reactions and reciprocal effects between service providers' affect and CSS. The aim of this study was to expand extant research (i) by analyzing service providers' short-term (across a day) and mid-term (across 2 weeks) affective reactions to perceived CSS; (ii) by analyzing intraindividual as well as interindividual effects; and (iii) by investigating reciprocal effects of affective reactions and CSS that may eventually lead to psychosocial cycles. Our study employed a diar…

Social stressOrganizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementPanel designSociology and Political ScienceSample (statistics)Service providerAffect (psychology)Extant taxonotorhinolaryngologic diseasesPublic servicePsychologyPsychosocialGeneral PsychologyApplied PsychologyClinical psychologyJournal of Organizational Behavior
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Customer-Related Social Stressors

2015

Abstract. The purpose of this study was to replicate the dimensions of the customer-related social stressors (CSS) concept across service jobs, to investigate their consequences for service providers’ well-being, and to examine emotional dissonance as mediator. Data of 20 studies comprising of different service jobs (N = 4,199) were integrated into a single data set and meta-analyzed. Confirmatory factor analyses and explorative principal component analysis confirmed four CSS scales: disproportionate expectations, verbal aggression, ambiguous expectations, disliked customers. These CSS scales were associated with burnout and job satisfaction. Most of the effects were partially mediated by …

Social stressOrganizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementWell-beingApplied psychologyCognitive dissonanceJob satisfactionVerbal aggressionBurnoutService providerPsychologySocial psychologyApplied PsychologyJournal of Personnel Psychology
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Masculinity ideology and psychological strain: Considering men’s social stressors in female-dominated occupations

2015

According to the gender role strain paradigm (GRSP), men's adherence to masculinity ideology could result in dysfunction strain when it becomes incompatible with other role demands. To support the relevance of GRSP in the work context, we explored the relationship between masculinity ideology and st

Social stressSocial Psychologymedia_common.quotation_subjectWork contextMasculinity ideologyGender StudiesSWBMasculinitygenderPsychological strainIdeologyGender roleLife-span and Life-course StudiesPsychologySocial psychologyApplied Psychologymedia_common
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