| Literature DB >> 25883565 |
Peter Payne1, Mardi A Crane-Godreau1.
Abstract
Basic to all motile life is a differential approach/avoid response to perceived features of environment. The stages of response are initial reflexive noticing and orienting to the stimulus, preparation, and execution of response. Preparation involves a coordination of many aspects of the organism: muscle tone, posture, breathing, autonomic functions, motivational/emotional state, attentional orientation, and expectations. The organism organizes itself in relation to the challenge. We propose to call this the "preparatory set" (PS). We suggest that the concept of the PS can offer a more nuanced and flexible perspective on the stress response than do current theories. We also hypothesize that the mechanisms of body-mind therapeutic and educational systems (BTES) can be understood through the PS framework. We suggest that the BTES, including meditative movement, meditation, somatic education, and the body-oriented psychotherapies, are approaches that use interventions on the PS to remedy stress and trauma. We discuss how the PS can be adaptive or maladaptive, how BTES interventions may restore adaptive PS, and how these concepts offer a broader and more flexible view of the phenomena of stress and trauma. We offer supportive evidence for our hypotheses, and suggest directions for future research. We believe that the PS framework will point to ways of improving the management of stress and trauma, and that it will suggest directions of research into the mechanisms of action of BTES.Entities:
Keywords: body-oriented psychotherapy; meditative movement; mind-body; post-traumatic stress disorder; preparatory set; somatic experiencing; stress; trauma
Year: 2015 PMID: 25883565 PMCID: PMC4381623 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2015.00178
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
Figure 1The preparatory set and its five elements: affect, posture, and muscle tone, autonomic state, attention, and expectation all influence each other, forming a unitary response.
Outcomes of adaptive PS in four situations.
| Adaptive PS in time-limited situation | Appropriate action taken | Resolution of situation | Release of PS | Formation of new PS. Increased Resilience |
| Adaptive PS in chronic situation | Appropriate actions taken | Situation not resolved quickly | Prolonged PS | Prolonged PS—Increased AL; possible eventual overwhelm |
| Adaptive PS in overwhelming situation | Appropriate actions taken | Situation overwhelming | PS stays organized | Once the situation ends, no PTS |
| Adaptive PS in overwhelming situation | Appropriate actions taken | Situation overwhelming | PS disorganizes: trauma | Once the situation ends, likely PTS |
When the PS is well matched to the challenging situation (adaptive), there can be a variety of outcomes depending on the situation. If the situation is successfully resolved within a short time, there will be increased long-term resilience. If the situation fails to resolve quickly, there may be increased allostatic load. If the situation overwhelms the capacity to cope but the PS stays organized, there may be few long-term consequences. However if the PS becomes disorganized (see text for explanation) there may be lasting post-traumatic stress. (AL, allostatic load; PTS, post-traumatic stress.)
Two dimensions of maladaptive PS.
| Situational | Organized | Disorganized |
| Persistent | Organized | Disorganized |
Maladaptive PSs can be categorized in two dimensions. First, whether they have arisen in (poorly matched) response to the present situation, or whether they are chronic, persisting unresolved from a previous situation. Second, whether (despite being maladaptive) they are organized (retaining coherent goal organization), or whether they are disorganized (competing PSs arising simultaneously).
Figure 2Biological Completion In response to situational challenge, the PS prepares a response. If the preparation culminates in successful action, the PS can subside. If not, the PS may persist. Proprioceptive and exteroceptive sensory information informs the organism about the success or completion of the action.
Four kinds of maladaptive response and treatments suggested by PS view.
| Maladaptive PS | Organized PS | Faulty subcortical appraisal of present situation (situational) | Reappraisal through awareness of PS—voluntary re-organization |
| Organized PS | Held over from a previous unresolved situation (persistent) | Resolution or release of previous situation | |
| Disorganized PS | Overwhelmed by present situation (situational) | Trauma first aid and treatment needed | |
| Disorganized PS | Overwhelmed by previous unresolved situation (persistent) | PTSD or DESNOS: Resolution of past trauma needed |
The PS perspective suggests that the four kinds of maladaptive PS (organized/situational, organized/persistent, disorganized/situational, disorganized/persistent) each call for a different therapeutic response. If the PS is well organized and arises in response to the current situation, but is poorly matched, a process of conscious re-organization may be effective. A well-organized but persistent maladaptive PS could be termed a “bad habit”; a resolution through increased awareness of the origins of the PS may help. If the PS is disorganized, and the direct result of the present situation, immediate trauma “first aid” may be very effective. If on the other hand the disorganized PS is the result of past unresolved experiences, PTSD or “disorders of extreme stress not otherwise specified” (DESNOS) may follow, which require specific trauma-oriented therapy. DESNOS is a term from DSM V which covers a variety of trauma sequelae which fail to fall into the category of PTSD. (DESNOS: Disorders of Extreme Stress Not Otherwise Specified)
Use of PS in BTES.
| Qigong | Cohen, | P | P | P | P | P |
| Yoga | Satchidananda, | P | P | C | P | P |
| Meditation | Johnson, | P | C | C | P | P |
| Alexander | Jones, | P | C | C | P | P |
| Feldenkrais | Feldenkrais, | P | C | C | P | C |
| Rolfing | Rolf, | P | C | C | P | C |
| Reichian | Boadella, | P | P | P | C | P |
| Formative | Keleman, | P | P | P | P | P |
| SE | Levine, | P | P | P | P | P |
The listed BTES use interventions that involve several of the components of the PS. Stated claims of influencing other components of the PS are also listed. Although the BTES differ in emphasis and in the details of the intervention, they share a similar framework. The references in this table are to substantiate that the BTES claim to use these forms of intervention and to have these effects; they refer mainly to the writings of the founders or prominent practitioners, not to peer-reviewed publications. Key: P, Principal form of intervention C, Effect claimed.