Title: Chapter 12 Emotions, Health, and Stress
1Chapter 12Emotions, Health, and Stress
2Emotion
- Emotion
- Though emotions comprise a significant and
crucial part of our individual and social
experience, emotion is an elusive concept,
difficult to define and measure. - Through scientific research psychologists have
learned much about nature of emotions, but some
interesting and important questions remain
unanswered.
3The Crucial Importance of Emotion
- It is by no means true that we would make better
decisions if we could keep our emotions in check,
despite the pop culture lore that promotes this
idea. - Brain damaged people with impaired emotions are
generally inferior decision-makers. - Emotions are a powerful informer of our
decisions, closely related to motivation, as
almost any motivation has an emotion tied to it.
4Module 12.1
5Measuring Emotions
- Like many other constructs in psychology,
measuring emotion poses challenges to
psychological scientists. Each method has its
strengths and weaknesses. - Self-reports are fast and easy but may have
questionable accuracy. - Behavioral observations especially of facial
expressions are useful. Although facial emotions
can be suppressed, micro-expressions can be very
revealing. - Physiological measures use autonomic nervous
activity. These are harder to control or
suppress, although their meaning is subject to
interpretation.
6Excitement and Physiological Arousal
- The role of the autonomic nervous system
- The autonomic nervous system is the division that
controls the functioning of the internal organs. - The ANS has two subdivisions, the sympathetic and
parasympathetic nervous systems.
7The Autonomic Nervous System
- The sympathetic nervous system
- The sympathetic nervous system is comprised of
two chains of neuron clusters just to the left
and right of the spinal cord. - It increases the heart rate, breathing rate,
production of sweat, and flow of adrenaline. - It prepares the body for intense activity, fight
or flight and other stress-related behaviors. It
is the crisis management center.
8The Autonomic Nervous System
- The parasympathetic nervous system
- The parasympathetic nervous system consists of
neurons with axons extending out from the medulla
and the lower spinal cord. - These axons connect to neuron clusters near the
internal organs. - The parasympathetic nervous system is the
long-term survival center, promoting rest by
decreasing heart rate, digestion, and other
functions that keep an organism alive in the
long-term.
9The Autonomic Nervous System
- The two divisions of the ANS
- Both systems are active, and the shifting between
the two systems helps to keep the body in a
balanced condition called homeostasis. - Emergencies mainly activate the sympathetic
nervous system, but also may involve some
parasympathetic activity (i.e., being frightened
causes an individual to lose bowel or bladder
control).
10The Autonomic Nervous System
- The two divisions of the ANS
- We generally cannot directly control autonomic
responses, but we can influence them by voluntary
cognition and behavior, for example, athletes
learn to control breathing and focus their
concentration for improved aim.
11Concept Check
- If you ride on the back of your friends
brand-new high-powered motorcycle, does your
heart rate increase or decrease?
During the ride, your heart rate will
increase. What happens when the ride is
over? When you get off the motorcycle, it will
slow down.
12Emotion and Perceived Arousal
- Which comes first, the psychological experience
of emotion or the physiological arousal? - Common sense dictates that one feels sad and
therefore one cries, one feels happy and so one
laughs.
13Emotion and Perceived Arousal
- The James-Lange theory of emotions
- Two nineteenth century psychologists, working
independently, came up with a different
interpretation of how emotion and physiological
reactions are related. - The James-Lange theory reverses this process.
- The theory states that a persons interpretation
of a stimulus evokes the autonomic changes
directly. - The psychological experience of emotion is the
individuals perception of those physiological
changes.
14Emotion and Perceived Arousal
- The James-Lange theory of emotions
- You decide that you are happy because you are
smiling, sad because you are frowning and tears
are forming in your eyes. - According to the James-Lange theory, the
reactions are not enough to produce the emotions,
but you will not have the full experience of the
emotions without them.
15Concept Check
- You arrive at your psychology class and realize
that there is a test today and you completely
forgot about it. You feel nervous and start to
sweat. According to the James-Lange theory, which
comes first, the feeling of fear or the sweating?
The sweating
16The Autonomic Nervous System
- Effects of decreased perceived arousal
- Some medical conditions cause people to feel
little physiological arousal. - In the condition called pure autonomic failure
the ANS stops regulating the internal organs. - People who suffer from pure autonomic failure
recognize situations that call for strong
emotions (fear, elation) but they report that
their emotions are much less intense. - This is what the James-Lange theory predicts.
17Emotion and Perceived Arousal
- Schachter and Singers theory of emotions
- Another theory proposes that the physiological
state is not the same thing as the emotion. - According to the Schachter and Singer theory of
emotions, the intensity of the physiological
reaction determines only the intensity of the
emotion, not the type of emotion.
18Emotion and Perceived Arousal
- Schachter and Singers theory of emotions
- It is a persons cognitive appraisal of the
situation that determines the emotion that we
experience. - Research studies based on the Schachter and
Singer theory leave some unanswered questions
about the role of physiological arousal in
contributing to the intensity of the emotional
states.
19- Figure 12.4 According to the James-Lange theory,
physiological arousal determines the nature of
the emotion. According to Schachter and Singers
theory, physiological arousal determines the
intensity of an emotion, but not which emotion is
experienced.
20Concept Check
- According to the Schachter-Singer theory, which
comes first, the realization that you forgot
about the test, or the feeling of fear?
The realization (cognitive appraisal)
21The Range of Emotions
- Psychologists have yet to agree on a single list
of basic emotions but they have agreed on a list
of criteria for establishing what a basic emotion
should be.
22The Range of Emotions
- A basic emotion should emerge early in life
without requiring a great deal of experience. - The basic emotions should be found across
cultures. - Each basic emotion should have a unique
biological basis and distinct facial expression.
23The Range of Emotions
- Producing facial expressions
- The function of facial expressions in all
primates is communication, especially
communication of emotions. - Facial expression of emotion is much more likely
to occur in the presence of other people. - Facial expressions of emotion are more likely to
indicate a persons true internal state than
simple statements and other indicators.
24The Range of Emotions
- Producing facial expression
- For example, a voluntary smile, such as the one
you put on for a photographer, only utilizes the
mouth muscles. - A full, spontaneous smile, or Duchenne smile,
also involves the eye muscles along with the
mouth. - Most people cannot voluntarily produce a Duchenne
smile.
25The Range of Emotions
- Understanding facial expressions
- Researchers have found a large amount of evidence
that there is indeed a set of basic emotions. - Many facial expressions including smiling,
frowning, laughing, and crying occur throughout
the world and are even found in children who were
born deaf and blind.
26The Range of Emotions
- Understanding facial expressions
- Some of our facial expressions develop in the
absence of opportunities to observe and imitate
others. - There is evidence that the basic emotions consist
of happiness, sadness, fear, disgust, anger and
surprise. - Interpretation of these emotions by facial
expression is done easily and fairly accurately
across cultures.
27The Range of Emotions
- Understanding facial expressions
- But people also rely on gestures, changes in
expression, and social situation to make more
accurate judgments of others emotions. - People of different world cultures do not
necessarily agree about which internal states are
in fact emotions. - Also, a state that is associated with a
recognizable facial expression is not necessarily
an emotion.
28Concept Check
- What six states are currently believed to
comprise the six basic emotions?
Happiness Sadness Anger Fear Disgust Surprise
29Concept Check
- What is the evidence that these six may be the
basic emotions?
Most people in all cultures recognize the facial
expressions associated with these states.
30Emotions and Moral Decisions
- If emotions were not informative in some way, we
probably would not have evolved them. - Emotions may influence our moral decisions.
- Research studies using the Trolley Dilemma and
Footbridge Dilemma, problems that involve making
decisions about letting a small number of people
die to save a larger number of people, have
provided evidence that emotions play a powerful
role in deciding the most moral course of action.
31Emotion, Decision-Making, and Emotional
Intelligence
- It makes intuitive sense that good
decision-making would require some great degree
of emotional control, hence the familiar advice
to remain calm and rational when contemplating
big decisions. - This in fact is not entirely true. Only extreme
emotions interfere with decision-making. - Some degree of emotionality appears to be
necessary for good decision-making.
32Emotions and Decision-Making
- In fact, a number of case studies of patients
with brain damage suggest that the ability to
experience and express emotions plays a key role
in important life and moral decisions. - The case of Phineas Gage and more recently,
Antonio Damasios case study of Elliot both
provide evidence that feeling distinctly good or
bad is crucial in making decisions of major
importance in our lives so that the best outcome
is achieved.
33Concept Check
- A patient experiences a closed head injury, with
damage to the prefrontal cortex. What behavioral
and emotional problems might result from this
injury?
Problems with making decisions, expressing and
modulating emotions, tendency to impulsive
behavior, reduced ability to accurately interpret
the emotions of other people.
34Emotional Intelligence
- Emotional intelligence is defined as the ability
to perceive, imagine and understand emotions and
to use that information in decision-making. - The idea of emotional intelligence has gained a
great deal of popularity over the past few
decades, in psychology and related fields.
35Emotional Intelligence
- The evidence for the existence of a special kind
of intelligence related to emotions is still not
too strong though. - Measuring this construct poses challenges in
assessment that have yet to be well managed. - For example, in constructing items for a test of
emotional intelligence, too often the best answer
to a question might be it depends. - Emotional intelligence is an interesting idea,
but researchers still have a long way to go.
36Emotions and Decision-Making
- The ability to imagine the feeling that we would
have pursuing each option presented to us is a
big part of good decision-making capability. - Emotions are inseparable from the idea of good
and evil. - -- Antonio Damasio
37Emotions
- The debates described in this module may not
strike you as terribly important, but they are
part of larger issue of great importance to the
science of psychology. - Human behavior seems to be in large part
influenced by emotions.
38Emotions
- Just as the first chemists had to struggle to
identify the number and nature of basic elements
in order to understand the way the universe
works, so we need to keep striving to identify
the basic emotions and the relationship of these
to human experience and action.
39Module 12.2
40Happiness
- It is challenging to measure happiness
scientifically, because unlike the negative
emotions, it doesnt really cause any obvious
behavioral changes (like running away or
attacking). - Most researchers simply ask subjects how happy
they think that they are.
41Happiness
- Martin Seligman and other psychologists have been
developing a perspective called positive
psychology. - Positive psychology is the study of features that
enrich life, such as hope, creativity, courage,
spirituality and responsibility. - These features vary cross-culturally.
42Happiness
- American researchers have focused on the
perception of subjective well-being. - Subjective well-being is the individuals
assessment of the degree to which his or her life
is pleasant, interesting and satisfying.
43Happiness
- When surveyed regarding what conditions would
cause an increase in happiness, most people
answered - Money
- A good job
- More leisure time
- A boyfriend or girlfriend (or a new one)
44Happiness
- Other influences on happiness
- Some factors do correlate well with happiness
including - Inborn temperament or disposition.
- Marital status (being married seems relate to
being happy). - Striving towards goals and working for causes.
- Having a religious faith.
- Being healthy.
- Remember that a correlation does not necessarily
indicate a causal relationship. There may be more
than one explanation or direction for the
relationships listed above.
45Happiness
- How to be a happy person
- Have happy parents.
- Think about the long term when you make
decisions. - Have strong connections with other people.
- Be involved in activities that are important to
you.
46Happiness
- Wealth
- Researchers (and almost everyone else) are
curious about the degree to which income level
influences happiness. - This is challenging because it is difficult to
measure happiness, and there are cross-cultural
influences and problems of subjective
interpretation a number used for a rating by
one person may signify a different level to
another person. - The general conclusion drawn from research so far
is that wealth does not have a large effect on
happiness.
47Sadness
- Sadness is almost always reported to be a
reaction to loss. - Crying is a typical reaction to severe sadness,
but as with all other emotions cultures vary in
their attitudes and norms about crying. - Crying is usually accompanied by an increase in
SNS activity and a feeling of relief or
relaxation afterwards.
48Sadness
- The possible functions of crying
- However, research suggests that crying may not
actually relieve tension and that those who cry
are more likely to report feelings of depression
than those who dont. - Crying may function mainly to draw attention and
sympathy. - The shedding of tears occurs exclusively in
humans.
49Sadness
- Depressive realism
- Despite the good press given to a cheerful
outlook, it appears as if those who are sad or
mildly depressed make better decisions than those
who are happy and optimistic. - They assess their performance, popularity and
success more accurately than happy people. - They appear to weigh the evidence more carefully
and are more likely to be persuaded by a factual,
rational argument than an emotional one.
50Fear and Anxiety
- Some researchers are investigating the
relationship between emotions and brain activity. - There is evidence linking the emotions of fear or
anxiety to the amygdala. - When the amygdala is damaged, a persons ability
to experience these feelings may be impaired.
51- Figure 12.19 Certain structures in the pons and
medulla control unlearned fear reactions, such as
a startle response to a sudden unexpected loud
sound. Another structure, the amygdala, sends
information to the pons and medulla. Damage to
the amygdala eliminates learned fears but does
not affect the automatic startle response to a
loud sound. This drawing is of a human brain,
although the relevant experiments were conducted
with rats.
52Fear and Anxiety
- Damage to the amygdala also diminishes the
ability to recognize the signs of these feelings
in other people. - There is also impairment in the ability to
recognize anger, disgust and surprise. - The amygdala may be specialized to process
information relative to several kinds of emotions
53Anxiety, Arousal and Lie Detection
- The sympathetic nervous system and lie detection
- Throughout history, humans have been determined
to find a reliable test to determine whether a
person is telling the truth or is lying. - One of the most frequently used methods involves
the use of a polygraph or lie detector. - A polygraph measures SNS arousal such as blood
pressure, heart rate, respiration and electrical
conduction of the skin in reaction to a series of
questions.
54- Figure 12.20 The polygraph, a method for
detecting nervous arousal, is the basis for the
so-called lie detector test. The polygraph
operator (a) asks a series of non-threatening
questions to establish base-line readings of the
subjects autonomic responses, (b) then asks
questions relevant to an investigation. The
underlying assumption is that an increase in
arousal indicates nervousness, which in turn
indicates lying. Unfortunately, a large
percentage of innocent people become nervous and
therefore appear to be lying.
55Anxiety, Arousal and Lie Detection
- The sympathetic nervous system and lie detection
- A polygraph is a machine that records several
indications of sympathetic nervous system
arousal blood pressure, heart rate, respiration,
and electrical conduction of the skin. - Although the some people will confess simply
because they believe that the polygraph will
catch them if they do not tell the truth. - Some people are quite capable of regulating
reactions well enough to fool the machine.
56Anxiety, Arousal and Lie Detection
- The sympathetic nervous system and lie detection
- Although a typical polygraph test procedure does
identify a large number of guilty people, it also
misses a substantial minority and falsely
identifies some innocent people (37 in one
study) as guilty. - The guilty-knowledge test is a variant of the
standard test that produces more accurate results.
57Anxiety, Arousal and Lie Detection
- The sympathetic nervous system and lie detection
- The interrogator asks about information that
would only be known to someone who had been
involved in the crime. The suspect is expected to
show heightened arousal in response to the
correct details. - Although the guilty knowledge test improves the
accuracy of polygraph use, it is by no means
flawless and can only be used when law
enforcement has a great deal of information about
the crime that would not be known to the general
public.
58- Figure 12.21 Polygraph examiners correctly
identified 76 of guilty suspects as lying.
However, they also identified 37 of innocent
suspects as lying. (Based on data of Kleinmuntz
Szucko, 1984)
59Other Methods of Lie Detection
- It has been shown that when people lie, they
experience increased blood flow to the face. - A thermal camera can detect this blood flow,
without making contact with the persons body. - The method appears to work about as well as a
polygraph (which unfortunately is not saying much
to recommend it).
60Other Methods of Lie Detection
- Psychologist Paul Ekman has developed a fairly
good method based on observation of facial
expressions. - His research suggests that people who are trying
to keep a happy or straight face still make
very subtle, quick facial expressions of negative
emotion when trying to lie. - He calls these movements microexpressions.
- With good training, this method can be more
effectively used than polygraphs but it still may
fail when one is dealing with confident or
experienced liars.
61Concept Check
- List the various methods of lie detection.
Standard polygraph Guilty knowledge Thermal
camera Microexpressions
62Concept check
- List some of the objections to standard methods
of lie detection.
Not perfectly reliable or valid People can learn
to fake truthfulness or fake good Guilty
knowledge requires police to have much inside
knowledge of crime
63Anger and Violence
- The struggle to understand violence is among the
most important goals facing humanity in general,
and psychology in particular. - -- James W. Kalat
64Situations with Violence
- Frustration and aggression
- The frustration-aggression hypothesis is the idea
long held by psychologists that a failure to
obtain a desired or expected goal leads to
aggressive behavior. - This hypothesis has some limitations in
explaining aggressive behavior.
65Situations with Violence
- Frustration and aggression
- The experience of anger and potential for
aggression depends on an attribution of intention
on the part of the person causing the
frustration. - The fact that frustration leads to anger does not
necessitate that the anger will lead to
aggression. - Frustration appears to play a role only in
emotional aggression, not in the more calm
aggressive behaviors that people learn as
strategies for getting what they want.
66Situations with Violence
- Frustration and aggression
- More recently, researchers have proposed that any
unpleasant event provokes a fight or flight
reaction. Whether aggression results from the
event depends on a variety of factors. - The likelihood of violence resulting from
frustration is particularly high in a sexual
context. One of the most common causes of murder
is sexual jealousy.
67Situations with Violence
- After violence reconciliation
- Reconciliation after outbursts of anger and
aggression are vital in species that live in
social groups. - After reconciliation, the individuals who fought
are less likely to fight again. - Conciliatory behaviors have been observed in
wolves, monkeys, chimpanzees and humans.
68Characteristics of Violent People
- For a long time, psychologists assumed that
violence was a result of the perpetrators low
self-esteem. - More recent research shows little or no
relationship between violence and low self-esteem.
69Characteristics of Violent People
- In many professional contexts, psychologists are
asked to predict who will be violent, and how
violent they might be. - So what factors are good predictors of violent
behavior?
70Characteristics of Violent People
- One challenge in this effort is the fact that
violent acts, even in a person with a history,
are sporadic and situation-dependent. - The best predictor of future violent behavior, in
general, is past violent behavior. - A person with a long history of violence, dating
back to childhood, is more likely to re-offend
than a person who has committed a single or
isolated violent act.
71Characteristics of Violent People
- Some other factors that have been linked to
violent tendencies are - Having been physically abused as a child
- Having witnessed violence between ones parents
- Use of alcohol or drugs
- History of impulsive acts
- Growing up in a violent neighborhood
72Characteristics of Violent People
- Lack of remorse after hurting someone
- Weaker than average level of physiological
response to arousal - Smaller than average prefrontal cortex
- Decreased release of serotonin in the prefrontal
cortex - History of suicide attempts
- Preference for violent television programming
73Characteristics of Violent People
- Men are more violent in general than women.
- Young men (in their late teens and early
twenties) are more likely to commit acts of
violence. - Correlational research suggests a link between a
males tendency to violence and his mothers
smoking during his prenatal development, but the
nature of this relationship has yet to be
determined (again, remember the importance of
caution in interpreting correlational data).
74Concept Check
- When all the evidence is examined, the best
predictor of future violent behavior is
Past violent behavior
75Concept Check
- Name some other factors that have been associated
with tendencies - towards violent behavior.
Childhood abuse and exposure to domestic
violence/violent neighborhood Drug and alcohol
use History of impulsive behavior History of
suicide attempts Various biological
factors Diagnosis of Antisocial Personality
Disorder
76Sexual Violence
- Violence is most likely to occur between people
who know each other well. - Married and dating couples usually know each
other well. - When violence is defined very broadly, women can
be just as violent as men, if not more so,
according to some studies.
77Sexual Violence
- But when violence is defined narrowly and only
serious and injurious attacks are included, then
men commit far more of this type of violence, and
are far more likely to seriously injure or kill
their partners. - Men who commit serious acts of this nature are
generally those who are prone to criminal and
violent behavior towards other people as well.
78Sexual Violence
- Rape
- Rape is defined as sexual contact obtained
through violence, coercion, or threats. - In practice, rape is defined on a continuum that
ranges from forcible rape to a refusal to respect
ambiguous resistance. - Verbal coaxing can sometimes result in a woman
having unwanted sex. - Men are encouraged to disregard womens refusals
as part of a script for negotiating sexual
relations.
79Sexual Violence
- Rape
- Preventing date rape is partly a matter of
persuading men to respect a womans refusal and
partly a matter of advising women to express
their refusal emphatically. - --James W. Kalat
80Sexual Violence
- Rape
- What kind of men commit rape?
- The best available evidence suggests that most
perpetrators of sexual violence have a history of
hostility and aggression towards women and men. - Other factors (history of childhood abuse,
expression of anger towards women in particular)
have a weaker relationship with acts of sexual
violence.
81Controlling Violence
- We like to believe that people are fundamentally
good, and that violence and cruelty result from
social problems that can be corrected poverty,
injustice, ignorance, and low self-esteem. - But social improvements only remove some of the
problem. There have been and are violent
individuals who have experienced none of these
difficulties.
82Controlling Violence
- Harsh punishments are probably not the answer.
Children do need guidance and supervision, and
consequences that are quick, certain, and
logical. - People can be taught at any age to handle
frustration more effectively and to learn
non-violent ways to negotiate for the things that
they want. Anger management training is sometimes
used effectively for this purpose. - There are a variety of interventions and
techniques available for reducing the amount of
violence in our society.
83Other Emotions
- Surprise is usually listed as a basic emotion by
most psychologists but little research has been
done related to it. - Disgust is an emotional reaction that appears to
derive from the reaction one would have if one
discovered that contaminated matter was in ones
mouth. - Contempt is based upon a reaction to violation of
community standards. - Embarrassment, guilt, shame and pride are related
self-conscious emotions based on our view of
how people regard us and our actions.
84Module 12.3
- Stress, Coping and Health
85Health Psychology
- Health psychology examines how peoples behavior
can improve health and prevent illness, and how
human behavior influences the course of recovery
from illness.
86Health Psychology
- Stress
- Selyes Concept of Stress
- An enormous variety of experiences can cause
stress. - The physician Hans Selye defined stress as the
nonspecific response of the body to any demand
made upon it. - Selyes definition emphasizes the role that
changes in ones life play in causing stress, and
so it does not fully consider the effects of more
chronic problems such as poverty or
discrimination.
87Health Psychology
- Selyes concept of stress
- Selye proposed that the body responds to stress
in three distinct stages - Alarm a brief period of high arousal of the
sympathetic nervous system, which readies the
body for vigorous activity. - Resistance if the stressor goes on for longer
than a few minutes, the body enters a phase of
prolonged but moderate arousal. - Exhaustion intense and long-lasting stress
causes a depletion of proteins in the immune
system. The end result is increased vulnerability
to illness, fatigue, and weakness.
88Concept Check
- According to Selyes definition of stress, is
going away to college stressful?
Yes
89Concept Check
- According to Selyes definition of stress, would
remaining in an - unhappy marriage of over 30 years duration be
stressful?
No
90Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
- A prolonged period of anxiety and depression
following the experience of an extremely
stressful event is known as posttraumatic stress
disorder (PTSD). - This disorder has been well-documented in war
veterans and those who have survived violent
crimes and serious accidents. - Some people who endure these events do not suffer
PTSD, so the causes of this disorder are still
not fully understood. - People with PTSD suffer from nightmares,
emotional outbursts, guilt, and flashbacks that
may cause debilitating panic.
91Measuring Stress
- Life is inherently stressful. How much stress is
detrimental to ones health? - In order to answer this question, psychologists
need to measure both stress and health. - Both of these conditions are difficult to
measure. - Checklists that have been devised for this
purpose have been found to have low reliability
and validity.
92Measuring Stress
- A given event will have different meanings to
different people, depending on the circumstances. - A lost job is unlikely to be more than a minor
annoyance to a 16-year-old fast-food worker who
still lives at home. - Because of these difficulties in measuring stress
according to Selyes definition, psychologist
Arnold Lazarus devised a different perspective on
it.
93Measuring Stress
- According to Lazarus, a stressful situation is
one that a person regards as threatening and
possibly exceeding his or her resources. - Thus, divorce could be a major life stressor for
an abandoned spouse with several children, but
perhaps an easier (though probably not
stress-free) transition for a childless couple in
their 20s who are more or less in agreement
about the decision to end the marriage. - Lazarus view also suggests that people can learn
to think differently and deal with events
actively instead of feeling threatened by them.
94- Figure 12.24 Lazarus stated that evaluation of
some kind, conscious or unconscious, always
precedes emotion. Thus, a given event can be
highly stressful for one person yet only slightly
stressful or not at all for someone else.
95Measuring Stress
- To summarize, in Lazarus view the degree of
stressfulness of any event depends upon - Our interpretation of the event
- Our reaction to it
- The nature of the other events in our lives
96Measuring Stress
- The most accurate way to measure stress would be
through a careful and detailed interview to
assess all the possible stressors and positive
aspects in an individuals life. - Stress research is difficult to do well, but
researchers are able to identify the types of
experiences that endanger health.
97Concept Check
- 16-year-old Brenda has broken up with her
boyfriend, lost her job as a cashier at Burger
Tyrant, and been kicked off the varsity girls
soccer team. Yet she scores in the mild stress
range on the stress checklist that her guidance
counselor administered to her yesterday. What are
some possible interpretations of these facts?
98Concept Check
- Although it is possible the Brenda is showing
signs of an emotional problem or drug use (or
both), it is also possible that her feelings
towards her boyfriend had changed, that she hated
her job at restaurant, and that she disliked
playing soccer but was doing so to please her
parents (for example).
99Coping Styles and Strategies
- Psychologists have developed two major categories
for classifying how people handle their stress. - Monitoring the style in which people attend
carefully to the stressful event and try to take
effective action. - Blunting the style adopted by those who try to
avoid the stressful event or avoid thinking about
it.
100Coping Styles and Strategies
- People tend to prefer one style to the other, but
the most effective strategy depends on the nature
of the stressor. - If you are experiencing stress due to an upcoming
psychology test, a monitoring strategy of taking
effective action is probably warranted. Form a
study group and hit the books! - If you are caught in a major traffic tie-up,
blunting is probably a better tack, as there is
really nothing you can do about your situation.
Turn on the radio and chill out.
101Coping Styles and Strategies
- Monitoring strategies
- The importance of predictability and control
- When we are engaged in an activity voluntarily,
we usually know what to expect and how to change
what we are doing or quit if necessary. - The ability to predict how things will unfold
makes the activity or event less stressful.
102Coping Styles and Strategies
- Monitoring strategies
- Nursing home residents and hospital patients who
told what to expect and given a chance to state
preferences about their care report feeling
better while under care and tend to live longer. - Rehearsing or visualizing a process can be an
effective way to prepare for a demanding or
stressful event.
103Coping Styles and Strategies
- Monitoring strategies
- Inoculation is another word for receiving a
vaccine. - Inoculation places a small amount of weakened or
dead germs into a persons body. - The amount of disease bearing material is not
enough to make the person sick, but it does
produce an immune reaction. In some cases, the
protection lasts a lifetime. - To inoculate yourself against stress is to expose
yourself to small amounts or less serious
versions of the event prior to encountering the
actual stressor.
104Coping Styles and Strategies
- Social support
- Just talking about an experience with someone you
trust can be a great relief. - Talking with any sympathetic and supportive
person can be useful. - It is particularly helpful to talk with others
who are having or have had similar problems. - Giving support can be even more stress-reducing
than receiving it. - Many well-known social organizations and
self-help groups, such as Alcoholics Anonymous
and Compassionate Friends (for parents of
children who have been murdered) provide these
services for the public.
105Coping Styles and Strategies
- Beliefs as coping strategies
- Sometimes it appears that a simple cognitive
re-framing or a version of the personal fable
may have a protective effect on stress. - Seeming rationalizations and distortions such as
looking at the bright side and playing up ones
strengths while disregarding flaws and weaknesses
can be useful in reducing the negative effects of
stress. - In one study, men with HIV who seemed to be in
denial about the seriousness of their problem
actually survived longer than those who
acknowledged it.
106Coping Styles and Strategies
- Blunting strategies
- Blunting strategies are most useful when the
stressor cannot be avoided. - Blunting strategies attempt to manage the
reaction to the stressor rather than take action
in response to it. - Relaxation, exercise and distraction are common
blunting strategies.
107Coping Styles and Strategies
- Blunting strategies
- Relaxation techniques range from simply finding
some quiet time to relax physically and mentally
to various organized mediation practices. - Although exercise arouses the sympathetic nervous
system in the short-term, in the long-term seems
to have an inoculating effect on those who engage
in it regularly. - Distraction is similar to hypnosis in that it can
reduce concentration on the unpleasant stimulus
by replacing it with a different focus of
attention.
108Are Coping Techniques Effective?
- These strategies work well for many people, but
there is a trade-off. - It takes energy to find ways to endure and cope
with stress - energy that might have been
available for other, more pleasurable or
rewarding pursuits.
109Are Coping Techniques Effective?
- These techniques do offer a substantial
possibility for people who experience stress to
find strength and positive aspects in negative
life events, and for other people to be inspired
and to learn from these experiences.
110Stress and Psychosomatic Illness
- A psychosomatic illness is not an imagined or
feigned illness. - It is an illness that is influenced by someones
experiences particularly stressful experiences
or by his or her reactions those experiences. - Something about the persons lifestyle or
behavior has influenced the onset or progression
of the illness. - It is probably true that most illnesses are
psychosomatic to some extent. - Its all in your head!
111Stress and Psychosomatic Illness
- It is probably not the case that emotions or
stress lead directly to illness. - Rather, negative emotion and great stress may
influence an individual to engage in risky
behavior or self-neglect. - Curses and hexes may also work in this way,
by influencing a persons beliefs and emotional
state, leading to deterioration of health.
112Stress and Psychosomatic Illness
- Heart disease
- In the 1970s a physician hypothesized a link
between an impatient, success-driven personality
and heart disease. - Type A personality describes a highly
competitive, impatient, hurried person who
typically has an angry and hostile temperament. - Type B personality designates those who are
easygoing, less hurried and less hostile.
113Stress and Psychosomatic Illness
- Heart disease
- There does seem to be a link between a hostile
disposition and heart disease. - But genetics, diet, exercise and other factors
have a stronger influence than personality
factors or emotional tendencies. - Culture also dictates pace of life, diet, and
other lifestyle factors that would relate to
heart disease.
114Stress and Psychosomatic Illness
- Cancer
- Behavior influences the onset and spread of
cancer indirectly. - Fear or anxiety can prevent people from taking
preventative steps such as performing
self-examinations. - Emotional states and stress may lead to
impairment of the immune system so that a greater
risk of certain types of cancer will occur. - The two states that are most likely to do so are
depression and stress.
115Stress and Psychosomatic Illness
- Cancer
- Still research suggests that emotional factors
are far less important in contributing to cancer
than exposure to toxins, genetic factors, and
lifestyle factors. - Psychological factors play a role in how people
behave after they learn of their condition. - The more support cancer patients receive, the
more positive steps they take on their own
behalves the better their quality of life and
chance of recovery will be.
116Healing The Psychological and The Somatic
- Psychological factors are just one aspect of
health. - Healthy diet, regular exercise, avoidance of
drugs and alcohol, regular doctor examinations
will all improve ones chances of a long and
healthy life. - Controlling negative emotions on reducing stress
will likely decrease the chance of heart disease.
117Healing The Psychological and The Somatic
- But we cannot overestimate the impact of
behavioral and psychological factors, either. - One should not feel guilty if one eventually
develops heart disease or cancer anyway, because
many of the physical causes of these diseases
(genes, accidental exposure to toxins) are beyond
ones control. -