| Literature DB >> 25859199 |
Vanessa J Meyer1, Yoojin Lee2, Christian Böttger3, Uwe Leonbacher3, Amber L Allison4, Elizabeth A Shirtcliff2.
Abstract
Physiological habituation to laboratory stressors has previously been demonstrated, although the literature remains equivocal. Previous studies have found skydiving to be a salient naturalistic stressor that elicits a robust subjective and physiological stress response. However, it is uncertain whether (or how) stress reactivity habituates to this stressor given that skydiving remains a risky, life-threatening challenge with every jump despite experience. While multiple components of the stress response have been documented, it is unclear whether an individual's subjective emotions are related to their physiological responses. Documenting coordinated responsivity would lend insight into shared underlying mechanisms for the nature of habituation of both subjective (emotion) and objective (cortisol) stress responses. Therefore, we examined subjective emotion and cortisol responses in first-time compared to experienced skydivers in a predominantly male sample (total n = 44; males = 32, females = 12). Hierarchical linear modeling (HLM) revealed that experienced skydivers showed less reactivity and faster recovery compared to first-time skydivers. Subjective emotions were coordinated with physiological responses primarily within first-time skydivers. Pre-jump anxiety predicted cortisol reactivity within first-time, but not experienced, skydivers. Higher post-jump happiness predicted faster cortisol recovery after jumping although this effect overlapped somewhat with the effect of experience. Results suggest that experience may modulate the coordination of emotional response with cortisol reactivity to skydiving. Prior experience does not appear to extinguish the stress response but rather alters the individual's engagement of the HPA axis.Entities:
Keywords: HPA axis; anxiety; cortisol; emotion; habituation; skydiving
Year: 2015 PMID: 25859199 PMCID: PMC4373275 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2015.00138
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
Figure 1Subjective emotion ratings among first-time and experienced skydivers. Anxiety and happiness ratings among first-time and experienced jumpers at three time points across the skydiving day confirms that peak anxiety occurred at 1.5 h before the jump and happiness peaked immediately after the jump. This justifies examining these emotions specifically at those time points. Error bars indicate +/− one standard error. Range of possible values 0–160.
Figure 2Cortisol response in first-time and experienced skydivers. Predicted cortisol is log-transformed cortisol (μg/dL) predicted by our HLM model. Experienced jumpers provided samples at time 1, time 3 (jump), and time 4. First-time jumpers provided samples at all five time points.