Cardiovascular responses in the laboratory and in the natural environment: Is blood pressure reactivity to laboratory-induced mental stress related to ambulatory blood pressure during everyday life?
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Evaluation of a remote, internet-delivered version of the Trier Social Stress Test
2021, International Journal of PsychophysiologyCitation Excerpt :The effect of the TSST on parasympathetically mediated control on heart rate (i.e., respiratory sinus arrhythmia; RSA) has been more variable, with most (Giese-Davis et al., 2006; Lackschewitz et al., 2008; Yim et al., 2015), but not all (Jönsson et al., 2010; Rohleder et al., 2006) studies reporting significant reductions in parasympathetic cardiac control during speech/mental arithmetic or an increase in heart rate from baseline to speech/mental arithmetic (e.g., Hellhammer and Schubert, 2012; Jönsson et al., 2010; Kirschbaum et al., 1993; Way and Taylor, 2011). Cardiovascular reactivity induced during laboratory testing does not always approximate that observed in naturalistic settings (Fredrikson et al., 1989). The TSST has been modified to include virtual reality (VR) versions that are more flexible to administer (Hawn et al., 2015).
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2002, Medicina ClinicaThe effects of physical and mental stress on cardiovascular reactivity in a group of African American female college students
1996, Journal of Anxiety DisordersSelf-esteem and neuroendocrine response to challenge: MacArthur studies of successful aging
1995, Journal of Psychosomatic Research