AI Article Synopsis

Article Abstract

Objective: The nature of the relationship between physiological and subjective responses in phobic subjects remains unclear. Phobics have been thought to be characterized by a heightened physiological response (physiological perspective) or by a heightened perception of a normal physiological response (psychological perspective).

Method: In this study, we examined subjective measures of anxiety, heart rate (HR), and cardiac autonomic responses to flight-related stimuli in 127 people who applied for fear-of-flying therapy at a specialized treatment center and in 36 controls without aviophobia.

Results: In keeping with the psychological perspective, we found a large increase in subjective distress (eta(2)=.43) during exposure to flight-related stimuli in the phobics and no change in subjective distress in the controls, whereas the physiological responses of both groups were indiscriminate. However, in keeping with the physiological perspective, we found that, within the group of phobics, increases in subjective fear during exposure were moderately strong coupled to HR (r =.208, P=.022) and cardiac vagal (r =.199, P=.028) reactivity. In contrast to predictions by the psychological perspective, anxiety sensitivity did not modulate this coupling.

Conclusion: We conclude that subjective fear responses and autonomic responses are only loosely coupled during mildly threatening exposure to flight-related stimuli. More ecologically valid exposure to phobic stimuli may be needed to test the predictions from the physiological and psychological perspectives.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jpsychores.2009.12.005DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

flight-related stimuli
12
physiological
8
phobic stimuli
8
physiological response
8
physiological perspective
8
autonomic responses
8
psychological perspective
8
subjective distress
8
exposure flight-related
8
subjective fear
8

Similar Publications

Automated aids are engineered to support operators' decision-making in complex and task-saturated environments, alerting them of system status and critical incidents. However, even the most advanced technologies are susceptible to failure. Monitoring imperfect automated systems poses unique challenges related to operator attention and workload.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Psychological Distress and Physiological Reactivity During In Vivo Exposure in People With Aviophobia.

Psychosom Med

September 2015

From the VALK Foundation (Busscher), Leiden, the Netherlands; Institute of Psychology (Busscher, Spinhoven), Leiden University, Leiden, the Netherlands; Department of Psychiatry (Spinhoven), Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, the Netherlands; and Department of Biological Psychology and EMGO+ Institute (de Geus), VU University & VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.

Objectives: Exposure is regarded to be a crucial component of therapies for phobias. According to emotional processing theory, the success of exposure therapy is predicted by activation of subjective and physiological fear responses and their within-session habituation and between-session adaptation. This study tested this prediction for aviophobia.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: The nature of the relationship between physiological and subjective responses in phobic subjects remains unclear. Phobics have been thought to be characterized by a heightened physiological response (physiological perspective) or by a heightened perception of a normal physiological response (psychological perspective).

Method: In this study, we examined subjective measures of anxiety, heart rate (HR), and cardiac autonomic responses to flight-related stimuli in 127 people who applied for fear-of-flying therapy at a specialized treatment center and in 36 controls without aviophobia.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Panic patients are vulnerable to induction of panic attacks by sub-threshold interoceptive stimuli such as intravenous (i.v.) sodium lactate infusions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In this study we explored the changes in the variability and complexity of the electrocardiogram (ECG) of flight phobics (N=61) and a matched non-phobic control group (N=58) when they performed a paced breathing task and were exposed to flight related stimuli. Lower complexity/entropy values were expected in phobics as compared to controls. The phobic system complexity as well as the heart rate variability (HRV) were expected to be reduced by the exposure to fearful stimuli.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!