Weidner G, Matthews K A
J Pers Soc Psychol. 1978 Nov;36(11):1213-20. doi: 10.1037//0022-3514.36.11.1213.
Unpredictable and uncontrollable events are associated with a variety of illnesses. It was hypothesized that unpredictable aversive events are causally linked to physical symptom reporting and that the Type A coronary-prone behavior pattern affects symptom reporting, such that Type A individuals fail to report symptoms when they expect to continue working on a task as compared to when they believe they have completed it. In the present research, Type A and Type B women reported symptoms either at the end or in the middle of listening to unpredictable, predictable or ambient noise in the laboratory. Results showed that unpredictable noise produced more symptom reporting than predictable noise, which in turn produced more symptom reporting than the ambient noise; Type A individuals reported fewer symptoms in the middle of the task than at the end, whereas Type B's did not show this differential effect. Thus, both hypotheses were confirmed. Several possible explanations of the results are offered, and implications of the findings are discussed.
不可预测和无法控制的事件与多种疾病相关。研究假设,不可预测的厌恶事件与身体症状报告存在因果联系,A型冠心病易发性行为模式会影响症状报告,即与认为自己已完成任务时相比,A型个体在期望继续执行任务时不会报告症状。在本研究中,A型和B型女性在实验室中听不可预测、可预测或环境噪音的过程结束时或中间时段报告症状。结果表明,不可预测的噪音比可预测的噪音引发更多的症状报告,而可预测的噪音又比环境噪音引发更多的症状报告;A型个体在任务进行中比结束时报告的症状更少,而B型个体则未表现出这种差异效应。因此,两个假设均得到证实。文中提供了对结果的几种可能解释,并讨论了研究结果的意义。