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Cardiovascular (CV) response consists of changes in CV parameters such as heart rate, blood pressure, and heart contraction force in reaction to an event or set of events. It is significant for multiple reasons, perhaps most notably because research suggests that it affects the development and progression of heart disease. Disease models vary, but most assume that characteristically strong and prolonged CV responses confer health risk. Psychologists have long suspected linkages between motivational variables and CV response. However, formal study of the linkages was limited for many years. Motivationally based CV response research now flourishes, with researchers in various disciplines considering the role of relevant variables such as effort, incentives, and goals. This book conveys the amount and diversity of motivationally based CV response research that currently is being conducted. Chapters discuss mechanisms of motivational influence on CV response and apply motivational approaches to studying CV response in different life circumstances. Health implications are considered throughout. The volume will appeal to scholars and practitioners in numerous specialty areas, including motivation, emotion, psychophysiology, medical/health psychology, social/personality psychology and human factors/ergonomics. It will be a vital research source and could serve as a text or supplement in classes that address motivational, psychophysiological and health issues.
Cardiovascular (CV) response consists of changes in CV parameters such as heart rate, blood pressure, and heart contraction force in reaction to an event or set of events. It is significant for multiple reasons, perhaps most notably because research suggests that it affects the development and progression of heart disease. Disease models vary, but most assume that characteristically strong and prolonged CV responses confer health risk. Psychologists have long suspected linkages between motivational variables and CV response. However, formal study of the linkages was limited for many years. Motivationally based CV response research now flourishes, with researchers in various disciplines considering the role of relevant variables such as effort, incentives, and goals. This book conveys the amount and diversity of motivationally based CV response research that currently is being conducted. Chapters discuss mechanisms of motivational influence on CV response and apply motivational approaches to studying CV response in different life circumstances. Health implications are considered throughout. The volume will appeal to scholars and practitioners in numerous specialty areas, including motivation, emotion, psychophysiology, medical/health psychology, social/personality psychology and human factors/ergonomics. It will be a vital research source and could serve as a text or supplement in classes that address motivational, psychophysiological and health issues.
Contributors
Preface
Introduction
Rex A. Wright and Guido H. E. Gendolla
I. Mechanisms
A. Neural Integration and Direct Effects of Effort
1. Integration of Cardiac Function With Cognitive, Motivational,
and Emotional Processing: Evidence From Neuroimaging
Marcus A. Gray and Hugo D. Critchley
2. Beta-Adrenergic Cardiovascular Reactivity and Adaptation to
Stress: The Cardiac Pre-Ejection Period as an Index of Effort
Robert M. Kelsey
3. Psychophysiological Processes of Mental Effort
Investment
Stephen H. Fairclough and L. J. M. Mulder
Reward Influence and Response Specificity
4. Cardiovascular Response to Reward
Michael Richter
5. Emotion, Motivation, and Cardiovascular Response
Sylvia D. Kreibig
Affect and Stressful Conflict
6. Emotional Intensity Theory and Its Cardiovascular Implications
for Emotional States
Anca M. Miron and Jack W. Brehm
7. Gloomy and Lazy? On the Impact of Mood and Depressive
Symptoms on Effort-Related Cardiovascular Response
Guido H. E. Gendolla, Kerstin Brinkmann, and Nicolas
Silvestrini
8. Cardiovascular Reactivity to Stress: The Role of
Motivational Conflict
Justin E. Stanley and Richard J. Contrada
Fatigue
9. Pause and Plan: Self-Regulation and the Heart
Suzanne C. Segerstrom, Jaime K. Hardy, Daniel R. Evans, and Natalie
F. Winters
10. Multifaceted Effects of Fatigue on Effort and Associated
Cardiovascular Responses
Rex A. Wright and Christopher C. Stewart
II. Applications
A. Health and Cardiovascular Response
11. Cardiovascular Reactivity and Health
Stephan Bongard, Mustafa al'Absi, and William R. Lovallo
12. The Behavioral and Health Corollaries of Blunted
Physiological Reactions to Acute Psychological Stress: Revising the
Reactivity Hypothesis
Douglas Carroll, Anna C. Phillips, and William R. Lovallo
Social Striving and Sex (Gender) Influence
13. Agonistic Striving, Emotion Regulation, and Hypertension
Risk
Craig K. Ewart
14. Interpersonal Motives and Cardiovascular Response:
Mechanisms Linking Dominance and Social Status With Cardiovascular
Disease
Timothy W. Smith, Jenny M. Cundiff, and Bert N. Uchino
15. Social Influences on Cardiovascular Processes: A Focus on
Health
Greg J. Norman, A. Courtney DeVries, Louise Hawkley, John T.
Cacioppo, and Gary G. Berntson
16. Indeterminate Motivations: Cardiovascular Health Costs of
Living in a Social World
Britta A. Larsen and Nicholas J. S. Christenfeld
17. Effort Mechanisms Linking Sex to Cardiovascular Response:
Toward a Comprehensive Analysis With Relevance for Health
Rex A. Wright and Patricia Barreto
Work and Achievement
18. Cardiovascular Measures in Human Factors/Ergonomics
Research
Richard W. Backs, John Lenneman, and Nicholas Cassavaugh
19. Clarifying Achievement Motives and Effort: Studies of
Cardiovascular Response
Rémi L. Capa
Index
About the Editors
Rex A. Wright, PhD, is a professor of psychology at the
University of Alabama at Birmingham. He received his BA at the
University of Texas in Austin and his PhD at the University of
Kansas, and he did his postdoctoral training at the State
University of New York at Stony Brook.
Dr. Wright's research is concerned chiefly with determinants and
cardiovascular consequences of effort. He has authored numerous
publications, including research articles, book chapters, and
books. He also has held numerous visiting academic appointments,
including ones at the Max Planck Institute (Germany), the
University of Bielefeld (Germany), the University of
Erlangen–Nuremberg (Germany), the University of Geneva
(Switzerland), the University of Maryland at College Park, the
University of Missouri at Columbia, and the University of Texas at
Austin.
Dr. Wright's visits have been supported in part by the Fulbright
Program, the German Academic Exchange Service, and the Swiss
National Science Foundation. His research has been supported by
various granting agencies, most notably the National Science
Foundation.
Dr. Wright currently serves as an associate editor for the journal
Motivation and Emotion.
Guido H. E. Gendolla, PhD, is a professor of psychology at
the University of Geneva (Switzerland), where he holds the chair
for motivation psychology and directs the Geneva Motivation Lab. He
earned his diploma (corresponding to the MA) and his PhD in
psychology at the University of Bielefeld (Germany). He earned his
habilitation in psychology at the University of Erlangen–Nuremberg
(Germany).
Dr. Gendolla's research focuses on human motivation and affective
states and is mainly concerned with psychophysiological processes.
He has authored numerous publications, and his research has been
supported by various grants from the Deutsche
Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) and the
Swiss National Funds.
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