Trait-state anxiety: A note on conceptual and empirical relationships

1979 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Magnusson
Author(s):  
Michael J. Beatty ◽  
Andrea Martinez Gonzalez

Communication apprehension (CA) is generally defined as a predisposition to avoid communication, if possible, or experience anxiety symptoms when forced to communicate with others. CA was conceptualized as a trait-like tendency to respond, meaning that the inclination to avoid communication or experience anxiety during social interaction was fairly stable across time. State anxiety, on the other hand, is transitory in nature, and while it often represents the manifestation of CA, it can be triggered by situational factors even in communicators low in the trait. Although the construct was initially conceptualized as a cognitively experienced trait, the psychological literature on anxiety symptoms usually includes physiological symptoms. Indeed, studies published since the initial development of the CA construct have indicated that state anxiety experienced during communication is correlated with physiological measures. More recent work indicates that trait CA, while not typically correlated with measures such as heart rate, is correlated with stable, individual differences in brain activity. This chapter focuses on the complex theoretical and empirical relationships among physiological responses, trait CA, and communication state anxiety.


1999 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 18-26 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rudolf Stark ◽  
Alfons Hamm ◽  
Anne Schienle ◽  
Bertram Walter ◽  
Dieter Vaitl

Abstract The present study investigated the influence of contextual fear in comparison to relaxation on heart period variability (HPV), and analyzed differences in HPV between low and high anxious, nonclinical subjects. Fifty-three women participated in the study. Each subject underwent four experimental conditions (control, fear, relaxation, and a combined fear-relaxation condition), lasting 10 min each. Fear was provoked by an unpredictable aversive human scream. Relaxation should be induced with the aid of verbal instructions. To control for respiratory effects on HPV, breathing was paced at 0.2 Hz using an indirect light source. Besides physiological measures (HPV measures, ECG, respiration, forearm EMG, blood pressure), emotional states (pleasure, arousal, dominance, state anxiety) were assessed by subjects' self-reports. Since relaxation instructions did not have any effect neither on the subjective nor on the physiological variables, the present paper focuses on the comparison of the control and the fear condition. The scream reliably induced changes in both physiological and self-report measures. During the fear condition, subjects reported more arousal and state anxiety as well as less pleasure and dominance. Heart period decreased, while EMG and diastolic blood pressure showed a tendency to increase. HPV remained largely unaltered with the exception of the LF component, which slightly decreased under fear induction. Replicating previous findings, trait anxiety was negatively associated with HPV, but there were no treatment-specific differences between subjects with low and high trait anxiety.


2009 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrea R. Ashbaugh ◽  
Adam S. Radomsky
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lindsey M. Shain ◽  
Maryland Pao ◽  
Mary V. Tipton ◽  
Sima Zadeh Bedoya ◽  
Sun J. Kang ◽  
...  

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