| Literature DB >> 28733589 |
Stephanie J Dimitroff1, Omid Kardan2, Elizabeth A Necka2, Jean Decety2,3, Marc G Berman2,4,5, Greg J Norman2,4,5.
Abstract
Can viewing others experiencing stress create a "contagious" physiological stress response in the observer? To investigate second-hand stress, we first created a stimulus set of videos, which featured participants speaking under either minimal stress, high stress, or while recovering from stress. We then recruited a second set of participants to watch these videos. All participants (speakers and observers) were monitored via electrocardiogram. Cardiac activity of the observers while watching the videos was then analyzed and compared to that of the speakers. Furthermore, we assessed dispositional levels of empathy in observers to determine how empathy might be related to the degree of stress contagion. Results revealed that depending on the video being viewed, observers experienced differential changes in cardiac activity that were based on the speaker's stress level. Additionally, this is the first demonstration that individuals high in dispositional empathy experience these physiological changes more quickly.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28733589 PMCID: PMC5522461 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-05811-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Overview of observers’ responses to viewing videos (a) Baseline corrected mean IBI of low and high empathy observers while viewing videos. (b) Mean anxiety ratings made by low and high empathy observers while viewing videos. (c) Mean maximum time-lagged correlation between IBI of speakers and observers. (d) Mean lag (in seconds) to reach maximum correlation between speaker and observer IBI. All error bars represent standard error. *=Statistically significant after Bonferroni correction (p < 0.05).
Figure 2Visual representation of time lag analysis. This data represents one subject. Each line represents the correlation of observer’s IBI with speaker’s IBI, for each video type. As the time lag is increased from zero, we are able to determine at what time the maximum correlation is achieved.
Figure 3Visual representation of IBI data of observer from Fig. 2 watching a Stress video. The graph on the left shows how IBI of speaker and observer are related when no time lag is implemented. On the left, we see how IBI of speaker and observer are related when a time lag of approximately 8 seconds is applied. A secondary axis was created to help visualize differences in IBI, as the speaker was robustly stressed and as a result had a lower IBI compared to the observer.