Sheffield David, Carroll Douglas
a Department of Psychology , Glasgow Caledonian University , Glasgow , G4 0BA , Scotland.
Psychol Health. 1994 May;9(4):305-316. doi: 10.1080/08870449408407489.
In order to examine the hypothesis that social support attenuates cardiovascular reactions to standard laboratory stressors. 60 male and 60 female undergraduates were first tested alone and then in one of three conditions: alone, or with a friend or a stranger present. Those tested with a partner, be it friend or stranger, displayed cardiovascular reactions of a similar magnitude to those who remained alone. Subsequent analysis following reallocation of subjects in the partnered conditions to groupings based on their ratings of how supportive or prying they found their partners did yield some effects. However, they occurred as interactive effects with sex, appeared on some cardiovascular indices but not others, and were modest in size, frequently failing to emerge as reliable on post hoc analysis. It was concluded that future tests of the social support-reactivity hypothesis need to be conducted in more realistic social settings.
为了检验社会支持会减弱对标准实验室应激源的心血管反应这一假设,60名男性和60名女性大学生首先单独接受测试,然后在三种条件之一进行测试:单独测试,或有朋友或陌生人在场。与同伴(无论是朋友还是陌生人)一起接受测试的人,其心血管反应的程度与单独测试的人相似。在将处于有同伴条件下的受试者根据他们对同伴支持程度或窥探程度的评分重新分组后进行的后续分析确实产生了一些影响。然而,这些影响表现为与性别之间的交互作用,出现在一些心血管指标上,但不是其他指标上,而且影响程度较小,在事后分析中经常未能显示为可靠的结果。研究得出结论,未来对社会支持-反应性假设的测试需要在更现实的社会环境中进行。