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Associations between childhood trauma and emotion-modulated psychophysiological responses to startling sounds: a study of police cadets
Authors:Pole Nnamdi  Neylan Thomas C  Otte Christian  Metzler Thomas J  Best Suzanne R  Henn-Haase Clare  Marmar Charles R
Institution:Department of Psychology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1043, USA. nnamdi@umich.edu
Abstract:Childhood trauma may confer risk for adult psychopathology by altering emotional and physiological responses to subsequent stressors. Few studies have distinguished effects of childhood trauma from effects of current Axis I psychopathology on adult psychophysiological reactivity. The authors exposed 90 psychiatrically healthy police cadets to startling sounds under increasing threat of shock while assessing their eyeblink electromyogram (EMG), skin conductance (SC), and heart rate responses. When compared with those who did not endorse early trauma (n = 65), cadets reporting childhood trauma (n = 25) reported less positive emotion and showed greater SC responses across all threat levels. They also showed threat-dependent elevations in reported negative emotions and EMG responses. Results suggest that childhood trauma may lead to long-lasting alterations in emotional and psychophysiological reactivity even in the absence of current Axis I psychopathology.
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