Literature DB >> 9417480

The effects of social context and defensiveness on the physiological responses of repressive copers.

S D Barger1, J C Kircher, R T Croyle.   

Abstract

In previous research (T.L. Newton & R.J. Contrada, 1992), social context was found to moderate exaggerated physiological reactivity among individuals identified as using a repressive coping style. In this experiment, 119 undergraduates were classified into low-anxious, high-anxious, repressor, and defensive high-anxious coping categories. All participants completed a stressful speech task under either a public or private social context condition. The experimental social context was related to physiological reactivity and self-reported affect but did not moderate reactivity among repressive copers. Additionally, reactivity among repressive copers was not attributable to high defensiveness alone. Consistent with a theory of emotional inhibition, nonspecific skin conductance responses, but not heart rate, discriminated between repressors and nonrepressors.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9417480     DOI: 10.1037//0022-3514.73.5.1118

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Pers Soc Psychol        ISSN: 0022-3514


  8 in total

1.  Repressive coping style: relationships with depression, pain, and pain coping strategies in lung cancer outpatients.

Authors:  Nusara Prasertsri; Janean Holden; Francis J Keefe; Diana J Wilkie
Journal:  Lung Cancer       Date:  2010-06-16       Impact factor: 5.705

2.  Adaptive style and physiological reactivity during a laboratory stress paradigm in children with cancer and healthy controls.

Authors:  Natalie A Williams; Michael T Allen; Sean Phipps
Journal:  J Behav Med       Date:  2011-02-09

3.  Intact implicit and reduced explicit memory for negative self-related information in repressive coping.

Authors:  Esther Fujiwara; Brian Levine; Adam K Anderson
Journal:  Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci       Date:  2008-09       Impact factor: 3.282

4.  Listening for avoidance: narrative form and defensiveness in adolescent memories.

Authors:  Kristin L Nelson; Edward Bein; Julia Huemer; Erika Ryst; Hans Steiner
Journal:  Child Psychiatry Hum Dev       Date:  2009-05-19

5.  Which symptoms matter? Self-report and observer discrepancies in repressors and high-anxious women with metastatic breast cancer.

Authors:  Janine Giese-Davis; Rie Tamagawa; Maya Yutsis; Suzanne Twirbutt; Karen Piemme; Eric Neri; C Barr Taylor; David Spiegel
Journal:  J Behav Med       Date:  2012-10-20

6.  Associations between repression, general maladjustment, body weight, and body shape in older males: the Normative Aging Study.

Authors:  Raymond S Niaura; Laura R Stroud; John Todaro; Kenneth D Ward; Avron Spiro; Carolyn Aldwin; Lewis Landsberg; Scott T Weiss
Journal:  Int J Behav Med       Date:  2003

7.  Blunted cardiac reactivity to psychological stress associated with higher trait anxiety: a study in peacekeepers.

Authors:  Gabriela Guerra Leal Souza; Ana Carolina Ferraz Mendonça-de-Souza; Antônio Fernando Araújo Duarte; Nastassja Lopes Fischer; Wanderson Fernandes Souza; Evandro Silva Freire Coutinho; Ivan Figueira; Eliane Volchan
Journal:  BMC Neurosci       Date:  2015-11-23       Impact factor: 3.288

8.  Perceptions of coping with non-disease-related life stress for women with osteoarthritis: a qualitative analysis.

Authors:  Melissa L Harris; Julie E Byles; Natalie Townsend; Deborah Loxton
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2016-05-17       Impact factor: 2.692

  8 in total

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