Department of Clinical Health and Neuropsychology, Leiden University, P.O. Box 9555, Leiden 2300 RB, The Netherlands.
J Exp Psychol Gen. 2012 Feb;141(1):98-105. doi: 10.1037/a0024211. Epub 2011 Jul 18.
In the present study, we investigated the effect of prior aversive life events on freezing-like responses. Fifty healthy females were presented neutral, pleasant, and unpleasant images from the International Affective Picture System while standing on a stabilometric platform and wearing a polar band to assess body sway and heart rate. In the total sample, only unpleasant pictures elicited reduced body sway and reduced heart rate (freezing). Moreover, participants who had experienced 1 or more aversive life events showed greater reductions in heart rate for unpleasant versus pleasant pictures than those who had experienced no such event. In addition, relative to no-event participants, single-event participants showed reduced body sway to unpleasant pictures, while multiple-event participants showed reduced body sway in response to all picture categories. These results indicate that aversive life events affect automatic freezing responses and may indicate the cumulative effect of multiple trauma. The experimental paradigm presented is a promising method to study freezing as a primary defense response in trauma-related disorders.
在本研究中,我们调查了先前的厌恶生活事件对冻结样反应的影响。五十名健康女性在站在平衡台上并佩戴极地带的情况下,展示了来自国际情感图片系统的中性、愉快和不愉快的图片,以评估身体摆动和心率。在总样本中,只有不愉快的图片会引起身体摆动减少和心率降低(冻结)。此外,经历过 1 次或多次厌恶生活事件的参与者在不愉快与愉快的图片相比时,其心率下降幅度更大,而没有经历过此类事件的参与者则没有。此外,与无事件参与者相比,单次事件参与者对不愉快的图片表现出较小的身体摆动,而多次事件参与者对所有图片类别都表现出较小的身体摆动。这些结果表明,厌恶生活事件会影响自动冻结反应,并且可能表明多次创伤的累积效应。所提出的实验范式是研究与创伤相关的障碍中作为主要防御反应的冻结的一种很有前途的方法。