Vorster-De Wet Roné, Gerber Anthonie M, Raubenheimer Jacques E
Department of Basic Medical Sciences, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Free State, Bloemfontein, South Africa.
Department of Biostatistics, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Free State, Bloemfontein, South Africa.
Health SA. 2023 Feb 23;28:2064. doi: 10.4102/hsag.v28i0.2064. eCollection 2023.
Texting has become central to social life, with adverse effects on physiological functioning. Research into the impact of texting on cortisol secretion is limited.
Thus study aimed to determine how receiving mobile text messages affected salivary cortisol concentrations and investigate the moderating effects of stress, anxiety and depression on cortisol secretion.
Undergraduate physiology students attending physiology lectures at the Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Free State, 2016.
An experimental, crossover, quantitative design was used. Participants were involved over two consecutive days, receiving mobile text messages (intervention) on one day and acting as their own control on the other. Self-reported data on stress, anxiety, depression and subjective experience of the study, and saliva samples were collected. Text frequency and wording (neutral, positive, negative) were varied among participants.
Forty-eight students participated in the study. Salivary cortisol concentrations did not differ significantly between the intervention and control days. High anxiety levels were associated with increased cortisol concentrations. No associations with cortisol concentrations were documented in low to moderate anxiety, stress, depression or how participants experienced the intervention. There were no significant differences between text frequency, text emotion and change in cortisol concentrations on the intervention day.
Receiving mobile text messages did not elicit a significant cortisol response in participants.
Findings added to the body of knowledge about the effect of texting on student learning by measuring salivary cortisol concentrations in a lecture setting, with investigation into the moderating effects of stress, anxiety, depression and participants' subjective experience.
短信已成为社交生活的核心,对生理功能产生不利影响。关于短信对皮质醇分泌影响的研究有限。
本研究旨在确定接收手机短信如何影响唾液皮质醇浓度,并调查压力、焦虑和抑郁对皮质醇分泌的调节作用。
2016年,自由州大学健康科学学院参加生理学讲座的本科生理学学生。
采用实验性、交叉、定量设计。参与者连续两天参与研究,一天接收手机短信(干预),另一天作为自身对照。收集关于压力、焦虑、抑郁和对研究主观体验的自我报告数据以及唾液样本。参与者之间短信频率和措辞(中性、积极、消极)有所不同。
48名学生参与了该研究。干预日和对照日的唾液皮质醇浓度无显著差异。高焦虑水平与皮质醇浓度升高相关。低至中度焦虑、压力、抑郁或参与者对干预的体验与皮质醇浓度均无关联。干预日短信频率、短信情感与皮质醇浓度变化之间无显著差异。
接收手机短信未在参与者中引发显著的皮质醇反应。
通过在讲座环境中测量唾液皮质醇浓度,并调查压力、焦虑、抑郁和参与者主观体验的调节作用,本研究结果丰富了关于短信对学生学习影响的知识体系。