Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Biological Psychology - Stress
- Stress as a Bodily Response
- HPA system
Anmerkungen:
- Hypothalamic Pituitary Adrenal system
- stressor
- Hypothalamus
- stimulates Pituitary Gland
- secretes ACTH
- stimulates Adrenal Cortex
- secretes hormone corticosteroids
- Activates Hypothalamic
Pituitary Axis
- For prolonged stress
- corticosteroids do a
variety of things
- liver release
stored glucose
- maintain stable blood
glucose levels
- SAM pathway
Anmerkungen:
- Sympathomedullary pathway
- stressor
- Activates ANS
- Hypothalamus
- stimulates Adrenal medulla
- secretes adrenaline and noradrenaline
- produces a fight or flight response
- For short term responses
- produces Fight or Flight response
- Illness related to stress
- stress can make people more vulnerable to physical illness
- long term stressors can impair the
functioning of the immune system
- this may be by affecting the activity of
lymphocytes, natural killer cells and endorphins
- Keicolt-Glaser et al A: the effect of stress on the functionality of the immune
system P: they took blood samples from medical students a month before
and on the day of their final medical exam F: they found that the activity of
natural killer cells had decreased by the second blood sample, showing that
stress is related to a reduced response of the immune system. also the
immune systems of the students who had been experiencing loneliness or
life events were especially weak.
- Individual differences in response to stress
- Type A/B personalities
- Freidman and Rosenman argued that there are two important
personality types that affect your vulnerability to stress, influencing
phyical illness, in particular heart disease
- TYPE A: competitive, hostile, ambitious, pressured and impatient
- TYPE B: laidback, relaxed, not over competitve
- Matthew et al found that the component of
Type A personality that correlated the
highest w/ CHD was HOSTILITY
- Hardiness
- Suzanne Kobasa believed that some people cope w/
stressors better that others bc they obtain the personality
traits to do so = a 'hardy' person.
- 3C's
- COMMITMENT: they find meaning in their work , therefore have
a direction in life and see the purpose of what they are doing
- CHALLENGE: they view potential stressful situations as an opportunity rather than a threat
- CONTROL: they have a stronger sense of personal control than other people
- P: 100 male business executives experiencing many stressful events. she
assessed their hardiness against the three compontents, and later
compared against the illness scores at the time and 1 year later
- F: Hardy personalities influence the relationship between stress and physical illness bc
hardy people experience less stress because stressors are interpreted
differently. this affects
- Locus of Control
- Internal Locus of control means that you believe that you have
grater control over yourself and stressors, so you experinece less
stress
- Sources of Stress
- daily hassles and uplifts
- Kanner et al did research to see whether daily stressors are better predictors of physical or psychological illness. they got the
participants to fill out both scales once every month over 10 months alongside tests to check their physical and psychiatric well-being, and
at the end completed a correlational analysis. they found that daily hassles is a better predictor of stress related illnesses
- workplace stress
- Workload
- OVERLOAD= frustration when can't complete work because there is too much
- UNDERLOAD= bored when there isn't enough to do
- Control
- no control over deadlines
- work environment
- overcrowding
- temperature/ pollution
- noise
- predictability/controlability
- lack of social contact (isolated)
- Work pressures
- role conflict
- job uncertainty
- shift work
- life events
- SRRS
- Holmes and Rahe created the SSRS to act as a measurement of the amount of
readjustment a major life event would require. this is bc they realised that the life
events that affected the onset of illness, involved a change from a steady state.
- in order to show the relationship between stress and physical illness in research they made the SRRS
by examining 5000 patient records and making a list of 43 life events that preceded illness. then
they got nearly 400 ppts to rate the amount of stress produced from each life event. then to give
LCU's, the stress value was divided by 10
- Rahe et al conducted research on 2500 male US
naval personnel over a period of 6 months, using
the SRRS scale changed into LCUs
- Stress Management
- SIT - Stress Inoculation Therapy
- 1. Conceptualization
- 2. Skills training and relaxation techniques
- 3. Application and Follow Through
- Hardiness Training
- Biofeedback
- Biological therapies
- Beta Blockers