William von Hippel, Jeongeun Kim, Finnbar Fielding, Christopher J Chapman, Emily R Capodilupo, Gregory J Grosicki, Kristen E Holmes
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引用次数: 0
摘要
这项研究考察了心血管在清醒和睡眠期间对日常威胁和挑战的反应。大约11000人完成了每周三次的早晚调查,这些人包括不同种族但不包括社会经济背景的样本,他们在调查中表明他们当天是否预期并经历了威胁和挑战。参与者还在早上的调查中提供了血压测量值,并通过他们的WHOOP生物测量捕捉设备提供了白天的平均心率和睡眠时的静息心率测量值。入学于2024年4月开始,数据收集于2024年7月停止。结果表明,威胁和挑战都与白天血压升高和平均心率升高有关。相反,当人们睡着时,威胁与较高的静息心率有关,而挑战与较低的静息心率有关。这些结果表明,身体在为感知到的挑战做准备时获得了更多的恢复性睡眠,而不是为感知到的威胁做准备,这增加了与威胁相关的更大压力破坏身体恢复性睡眠能力的可能性。这些结果是否适用于经济边缘化群体成员,仍是一个悬而未决的问题。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA,版权所有)。
Cardiac responses to daily threats and challenges during wakefulness and sleep.
This research examines cardiovascular response to everyday threats and challenges during wakefulness and sleep. Approximately 11,000 people, who comprised a diverse sample ethnically but not socioeconomically, completed three weekly morning and evening surveys in which they indicated whether they expected and experienced threats and challenges that day. Participants also provided measures of blood pressure on morning surveys and provided measures of average heart rate during the day and resting heart rate when asleep via their WHOOP biometric capture device. Enrollment began in April 2024, and data collection ceased in July 2024. Results indicated that both threat and challenge were associated with higher blood pressure and higher average heart rate during the day. In contrast, when people were asleep, threat was associated with higher resting heart rate but challenge was associated with lower resting heart rate. These results suggest that the body achieves more restorative sleep in preparation for perceived challenges but not for perceived threats, raising the possibility that the greater stress associated with threats disrupts the body's capacity for restorative sleep. The generalizability of these results to members of economically marginalized groups remains an open question. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).
期刊介绍:
Emotion publishes significant contributions to the study of emotion from a wide range of theoretical traditions and research domains. The journal includes articles that advance knowledge and theory about all aspects of emotional processes, including reports of substantial empirical studies, scholarly reviews, and major theoretical articles. Submissions from all domains of emotion research are encouraged, including studies focusing on cultural, social, temperament and personality, cognitive, developmental, health, or biological variables that affect or are affected by emotional functioning. Both laboratory and field studies are appropriate for the journal, as are neuroimaging studies of emotional processes.