subjective stress
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2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Anja C. Feneberg ◽  
Ricarda Mewes ◽  
Johanna M. Doerr ◽  
Urs M. Nater

AbstractDespite a growing body of literature documenting the health-beneficial effects of music, empirical research on the effects of music listening in individuals with psychosomatic disorders is scarce. Using an ambulatory assessment design, we tested whether music listening predicts changes in somatic symptoms, subjective, and biological stress levels, and examined potential mediating processes, in the everyday life of 58 women (M = 27.7 years) with somatic symptom disorder (SSD) and depressive disorders (DEP). Multilevel models revealed that music listening predicted lower subjective stress ratings (p ≤ 0.02) irrespective of mental health condition, which, in turn, predicted lower somatic symptoms (p ≤ 0.03). Moreover, specific music characteristics modulated somatic symptoms (p = 0.01) and autonomic activity (p = 0.03). These findings suggest that music listening might mitigate somatic symptoms predominantly via a reduction in subjective stress in women with SSD and DEP and further inform the development of targeted music interventions applicable in everyday life.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 1005-1005
Author(s):  
Angela Roberts ◽  
Haylie Santos ◽  
Nathan Gill ◽  
Hui Zhang ◽  
Elizabeth Salley ◽  
...  

Abstract Primary progressive aphasia (PPA) is a clinical dementia syndrome for which there is no effective disease-modifying treatment. Impairments in language are the primary and persistent symptoms, and severely limit participation in everyday activities and family conversations. Despite this, there are no published studies examining the objective relationship between conversation difficulties and caregiving burden in PPA. We tested the hypothesis that the severity of care partner perceived conversation difficulties predicts caregiving burden using the Perception of Conversation Difficulty-Dementia Alzheimer’s Type and the Montgomery Borgatta Caregiving Burden Scale. The analysis included baseline data from 78 care partners (62% female) enrolled in the Communication BridgeTM-2 randomized control clinical trial of a speech-language intervention for PPA. Care partners had a mean age of 64.5 years (SD=10.76) and a mean relationship duration with the PPA participant of 38.6 years (SD=15.29). Eighty-six percent were spouses, 5% were adult children, and the remaining 9% were friends or siblings. Higher ratings of conversation difficulties were associated with increased caregiving burden for both objective burden (p < 0.001) and subjective stress burden (p < 0.001). The relationship between conversation difficulties and objective burden was mediated by dependence in activities of daily living and care partner depression, whereas the relationship with subjective stress burden was mediated by depression only. This is the first large scale study of care partner reported conversation difficulties and caregiving burden in PPA. The finding that conversation difficulties have a direct relationship with caregiving burden is an important consideration for interventions and outcome measurement in PPA.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (21) ◽  
pp. 9865
Author(s):  
Haewon Byeon

People living in local communities have become more worried about infection due to the extended pandemic situation and the global resurgence of COVID-19. In this study, the author (1) selected features to be included in the nomogram using AdaBoost, which had an advantage in increasing the classification accuracy of single learners and (2) developed a nomogram for predicting high-risk groups of coronavirus anxiety while considering both prediction performance and interpretability based on this. Among 210,606 adults (95,287 males and 115,319 females) in South Korea, 39,768 people (18.9%) experienced anxiety due to COVID-19. The AdaBoost model confirmed that education level, awareness of neighbors/colleagues’ COVID-19 response, age, gender, and subjective stress were five key variables with high weight in predicting anxiety induced by COVID-19 for adults living in South Korean communities. The developed logistic regression nomogram predicted that the risk of anxiety due to COVID-19 would be 63% for a female older adult who felt a lot of subjective stress, did not attend a middle school, was 70.6 years old, and thought that neighbors and colleagues responded to COVID-19 appropriately (classification accuracy = 0.812, precision = 0.761, recall = 0.812, AUC = 0.688, and F-1 score = 0.740). Prospective or retrospective cohort studies are required to causally identify the characteristics of anxiety disorders targeting high-risk COVID-19 anxiety groups identified in this study.


Author(s):  
Leandra Kuhn ◽  
Hannes Noack ◽  
Nadine Skoluda ◽  
Lisa Wagels ◽  
Ann-Kristin Röhr ◽  
...  

AbstractThe experience of stress is related to individual wellbeing and vulnerability to psychopathology. Therefore, understanding the determinants of individual differences in stress reactivity is of great concern from a clinical perspective. The functional promotor polymorphism of the serotonin transporter gene (5-HTTLPR/rs25531) is such a factor, which has been linked to the acute stress response as well as the adverse effect of life stressors. In the present study, we compared the impact of two different stress induction protocols (Maastricht Acute Stress Test and ScanSTRESS) and the respective control conditions on affective ratings, salivary cortisol levels and cognitive performance. To this end, 156 healthy young males were tested and genotyped for the 5-HTTLPR/rs25531 polymorphism. While combined physiological and psychological stress in the MAST led to a greater cortisol increase compared to control conditions as well as the psychosocial ScanSTRESS, subjective stress ratings were highest in the ScanSTRESS condition. Stress induction in general affected working memory capacity but not response inhibition. Subjective stress was also influenced by 5-HTTLPR/rs25531 genotype with the high expression group showing lower stress ratings than lower expression groups. In line with previous research, we identified the low expression variant of the serotonin transporter gene as a risk factor for increased stress reactivity. While some dimensions of the human stress response may be stressor specific, cognitive outcomes such as working memory performance are influenced by stress in general. Different pathways of stress processing and possible underlying mechanisms are discussed.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mitjan Morr ◽  
Jana Lieberz ◽  
Michael Dobbelstein ◽  
Alexandra Philipsen ◽  
René Hurlemann ◽  
...  

AbstractThe risk for developing stress-related disorders is elevated in individuals with high alexithymia, a personality trait characterized by impaired emotional awareness and interpersonal relating. However, it is still unclear how alexithymia alters perceived psychosocial stress and which neurobiological substrates are mechanistically involved. To address this question, we examined freshmen during transition to university, given that this period entails psychosocial stress and frequently initiates psychopathology. Specifically, we used a functional magnetic resonance imaging emotional face matching task to probe emotional processing in 54 participants (39 women) at the beginning of the first year at university and 6 months later. Furthermore, we assessed alexithymia and monitored perceived psychosocial stress and loneliness via questionnaires for six consecutive months. Perceived psychosocial stress significantly increased over time and initial alexithymia predicted subjective stress experiences via enhanced loneliness. On the neural level, alexithymia was associated with lowered amygdala responses to emotional faces, while loneliness correlated with diminished reactivity in the anterior insular and anterior cingulate cortex. Furthermore, insula activity mediated the association between alexithymia and loneliness that predicted perceived psychosocial stress. Our findings are consistent with the notion that alexithymia exacerbates subjective stress via blunted insula reactivity and increased perception of social isolation.


Healthcare ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (7) ◽  
pp. 918
Author(s):  
Hansen Li ◽  
Xing Zhang ◽  
Shilin Bi ◽  
Yang Cao ◽  
Guodong Zhang

Reducing the burden of pain via greenspace exposure is a rising research topic. However, insufficient evidence has been found in relation to the environmental effect itself. Residential greenspace, as a convenient but limited natural environment for urban dwellers, has benefits and services yet to be discovered. Therefore, the current study recruited 24 young adults to evaluate the effects of physical visit to, or image viewing of, residential greenspace on pain perception and related psychophysiological outcomes, via simulated pain. Pain threshold and tolerance were recorded via the level of pain stimuli, and pain intensity was evaluated using the Visual Analog Scale (VAS). The state scale of the State–Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI-S) and two adjective pairs were employed to measure the state anxiety and subjective stress, respectively. Meanwhile, heart rate (HR), heart rate variability (HRV), and blood pressure (BP) were measured to investigate physiological responses. Besides, Scenic Beauty Estimation (SBE) was also employed to assess participants’ preference regarding the experimental environments. The results revealed that visiting the greenspace significantly increased the pain threshold and tolerance, while no significant effect was observed for image viewing. On the other hand, no significant difference was observed in pain-related psychophysiological indices between the experimental settings, but significantly negative associations were found between the scores of SBE and subjective stress and state anxiety. In conclusion, the current study brings experimental evidence of improving pain experience via residential greenspace exposure, while the related psychophysiological benefits require further investigation.


Author(s):  
Martin Stoffel ◽  
Elvira Abbruzzese ◽  
Stefanie Rahn ◽  
Ulrike Bossmann ◽  
Markus Moessner ◽  
...  

AbstractWhile the overall effects of social relationships on stress and health have extensively been described, it remains unclear how the experience of social interactions covaries with the activity of psychobiological stress in everyday life. We hypothesized that the valence as well as quantitative characteristics of social interactions in everyday life would attenuate psychobiological stress. Sixty healthy participants provided data for the analyses. Using an ecological momentary assessment design, participants received 6 prompts on their smartphone for 4 days. At each prompt, they reported on social interactions since the last prompt (any occurrence, frequency, duration, quality, and perceived social support), current subjective stress, and provided one saliva sample for the analyses of cortisol (sCort) and alpha-amylase (sAA). Experiencing any contact within days as well as higher daily levels of contact quality and perceived social support were associated with reduced levels of sCort. Furthermore, on a daily level, experiencing at least one contact in-between prompts more often as well as having more contacts on average attenuated the sAA output. Perceived social support and contact quality as well as higher daily contact durations were associated with lower subjective stress. For sCort, daily levels of stress moderated the effects of experiencing any contact within days while daily perceived social support moderated the effects of subjective stress. For sAA, experiencing at least one contact in-between prompts more often on a daily level moderated the effects of subjective stress. There were no between-person effects throughout all analyses. The results show ecologically valid evidence for direct attenuating effects of social interactions on psychobiological stress as well as for the stress-buffering hypothesis in everyday life. Increasing the quantity and improving the valence of social interactions on an intrapersonal level can possibly reduce psychobiological stress and prevent its consequences.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kate Loveys ◽  
Mark Sagar ◽  
Xueyuan Zhang ◽  
Gregory Fricchione ◽  
Elizabeth Broadbent

BACKGROUND Loneliness is a growing public health problem that has been exacerbated in vulnerable groups during the COVID-19 pandemic. Social support interventions have been shown to improve loneliness and may be delivered through technology. Digital humans are a new type of computer agent that show promise as supportive peers in healthcare. For digital humans to be effective and engaging support persons, it is important that they can develop closeness with people. Closeness can be improved by emotional expressiveness, particularly in female relationships. However, it is unknown whether emotional expressiveness improves closeness in relationships with digital humans and affects physiological responses. OBJECTIVE This study investigated whether emotional expression by a digital human can affect psychological and physiological outcomes, and whether the effects are moderated by user gender. METHODS 198 healthy adults (101 females, 95 males, 2 gender-diverse individuals) were block-randomized by gender to complete a 15-minute self-disclosure conversation with a female digital human, in one of six conditions. In these conditions, the digital human varied in modality richness and emotional expression in the face and voice (emotional/ neutral/ no face; emotional/ neutral voice). Perceived loneliness, closeness, social support, caring perceptions, and stress were measured after the interaction. Physiological measures including heart rate, skin temperature, and electrodermal activity were collected during the interaction using an Empatica E4 watch. Three-way factorial ANOVA with post hoc tests were conducted to analyse the effect of face type, voice type, and user gender on outcomes. RESULTS Overall, emotional expression in the voice was associated with greater caring perceptions and physiological arousal during the interaction, and unexpectedly, lower feelings of support. Gender was found to moderate the effect of emotional expressiveness on loneliness, social, and certain physiological outcomes. For females, an emotional voice digital human was associated with improved perceptions of closeness, social support, and caring perceptions, whereas for males, a neutral voice digital human was associated with improvements in closeness, social support, and caring perceptions. For females, a neutral face was associated with lower loneliness and subjective stress compared to no face. Whereas interacting with no face (i.e., a voice only black screen) resulted in lower loneliness and subjective stress for males compared to a neutral or emotional face digital human. No significant results were found for heart rate or skin temperature. However, average electrodermal activity was significantly higher for males while interacting with the emotional voice digital human. CONCLUSIONS Findings suggest that emotional expressiveness in a female digital human has different effects on loneliness, social, and physiological outcomes for males and females. Results may inform the design of digital human support persons, and have theoretical implications. Further research is needed to evaluate how more pronounced emotional facial expressions in a digital human might impact results. CLINICALTRIAL Australia New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry (ANZCTR) registration application Id: 381816


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-15
Author(s):  
Anne Koopmann ◽  
Ekaterini Georgiadou ◽  
Iris Reinhard ◽  
Astrid Müller ◽  
Tagrid Lemenager ◽  
...  

<b><i>Background:</i></b> Similar to other countries, the government of Germany has implemented various restrictions of social life in March 2020 to slow the spread of COVID-19 pandemic. This results in millions of people being isolated for long periods, which may increase feelings of worry and anxiety. As the consumption of alcohol and tobacco is an often used dysfunctional strategy to cope with such feelings, these restrictions might cause an increase of consumption. Already at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, the World Health Organization (WHO) warned that increased alcohol consumption during the lockdown can increase the prevalence of alcohol use disorders in the future. However, up to now little is known about the changes in alcohol-drinking behavior and tobacco smoking in the general population during the COVID-19 pandemic. <b><i>Methods:</i></b> To address this theme, we investigated the changes in alcohol and tobacco consumption in the German population aged between 18 and 80 years via an online survey. <b><i>Results:</i></b> In total, 3,245 persons participated in the survey; 35.5% of them reported an increase in drinking during the lockdown (42.9% did not change their drinking behavior, 21.3% drank less, and 0.3% started drinking). The odds of consuming more alcohol during lockdown were associated with middle age, higher subjective stress due to the COVID-19 pandemic, a lower agreement with the importance of the restrictions, and consuming alcohol more than once per week before the lockdown. Also, 45.8% of the participants increased their smoking during the lockdown. The odds of smoking more during lockdown were associated with higher subjective stress due to the COVID-19 pandemic. <b><i>Conclusion:</i></b> These findings suggest that it is important to start campaigns to inform the general population about potential long-term effects of increased alcohol and tobacco consumption and to raise the health-care professionals’ awareness of this topic.


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