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December 2024

The social construction of cardiovascular reactivity

Author(s): Glynn, L. M., Kulik, J. A., Gerin, W.

Journal/Book: Ann Behavioral Med. 1998; 20: 7611 Elmwood Ave, Ste 201, Middleton, WI 53562-3161, USA. Soc Behavioral Medicine. 317-325.

Abstract: One can view the ''reactivity hypothesis'' as having two basic forms: the individual difference or personality approach, which suggests that people who show exaggerated cardiovascular responses to stress are at increased risk of developing cardiovascular disease, and the situational or social psychological approach, which suggests that circumstances which give rise to unusually large responses are those that put people at risk of disease. Both versions rely on the generality of cardiovascular responses across situations. Evidence is presented from two studies which indicate that such generality may, however be hard to come by. In the first study, examining the personality approach, we show that a simple change in setting dramatically attenuates the consistency of reactivity. In the second study, from the social psychological perspective, we show that subtle alterations in the situation have profound effects on group mean responses. In both cases, reactivity proved extremely sensitive to the context, suggesting that testing in arbitrary and artificial settings cannot be expected to generalize well to the real world. Instead, we argue, careful attention to psychological naturalism is essential, with the testing carefully matched to specific real-world phenomena of interest.

Note: Article Christenfeld N, Univ Calif San Diego, Dept Psychol, La Jolla,CA 92093 USA

Keyword(s): CROSS-SITUATIONAL CONSISTENCY; HEART-RATE REACTIVITY; BLOOD-PRESSURE; CYNOMOLGUS MONKEYS; LABORATORY REACTIVITY; RESPONSES; DISEASE; SUPPORT; STRESS; ATHEROSCLEROSIS


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