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Hostility and facial affect recognition: effects of a cold pressor stressor on accuracy and cardiovascular reactivity
Authors:Herridge Matt L  Harrison David W  Mollet Gina A  Shenal Brian V
Affiliation:a CAMC Cardiac Rehabilitation, 3200 MacCorkle Ave. S.E., Charleston, WV 25304, USA;b Psychology Department, Virginia Tech, Derring Hall, Blacksburg, VA 24061, USA;c Department of Behavioral Neurology, and Department of Clinical and Health Psychology, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32610, USA
Abstract:The effects of hostility and a cold pressor stressor on the accuracy of facial affect perception were examined in the present experiment. A mechanism whereby physiological arousal level is mediated by systems which also mediate accuracy of an individual’s interpretation of affective cues is described. Right-handed participants were classified as high hostile (N=28) or low hostile (N=28) using the Cook Medley Hostility Scale. The high-hostile group met joint selection criteria. Only high-hostile participants who showed cardiovascular reactivity to the cold pressor, with systolic BP change exceeding the group mean were included. Groups were further subdivided into cold pressor and non-cold pressor test conditions. It was predicted that high-hostile men, relative to low-hostile men, would show decreased perceptual accuracy when presented with happy, angry, and neutral facial configurations within the left visual field (LVF). Results indicated that high-hostile men were less accurate than low-hostile men in the LVF. Further, pre-stress accuracy scores in the high-hostile men were similar to the post-stress accuracy scores of the low-hostile men. The lateralization of affective function and the role of physiological arousal in affective facial perception are discussed.
Keywords:Hostility   Emotion   Neuropsychology   Health   Facial affect perception   Cold pressor stressor   Cardiovascular arousal
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