Tuesday, October 12, 2010
Thursday, October 7, 2010
Stress and Coping
Stressor – a stressful stimulus, a condition demanding adaptation
Burnout – A syndrome of emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and reduced personal accomplishment
Hassles – Small, everyday problems that accumulate to become a major source of stress
Frustration: unpleasant tension resulting from a blocked goal
Conflict: forced choice between two or more incompatible goals or impulses
--Approach-Approach: forced choice between two or more desirable alternatives
--Avoidance-Avoidance: forced choice between two or more undesirable alternatives
--Approach-Avoidance: forced choice between two or more alternatives both having desirable & undesirable results
Social Readjustment Ratings Scale – A psychological rating scale designed to measure stress levels by means of values attached to common life changes (see Life Changes in your notes)
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Acute stress – A temporary pattern of arousal caused by a stressor with a clear onset and offset
Chronic stress – A continuous state of stressful arousal persisting over time (and the parasympathetic nervous system cannot activate the relaxation response)
General adaptation syndrome (GAS) – A pattern of general physical responses that takes essentially the same form in responding to any serious chronic stressor
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Psychoneuroimmunology – Multidisciplinary field that studies the influence of mental states on the immune system
Immunosuppression – Diminished effectiveness of the immune system caused by impairment (suppression) of the immune response
Type A – behavior pattern characterized by intense, angry, competitive, or perfectionistic responses to challenging situations
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Type B –behavior pattern characterized by a relaxed, unstressed approach to life
Learned helplessness – Pattern of not responding to noxious stimuli after an organism learns that its behavior has no effect
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Cognitive hardiness – Mental quality of resistance to stress, based on a sense of challenge, commitment, and control
Resilience – Capacity to adapt, achieve well-being, and cope with stress, in spite of serious threats to development
Emotion-focused coping – Responding to stress by controlling one’s emotional responses
Problem-focused coping – Responding to stress by identifying, reducing, and eliminating the stressor
Social support – Resources others provide to help an individual cope with stress
- Tangible
- Informational
- Support groups
Health psychology – Psychological specialty devoted to understanding how people stay healthy, why they become ill, and how they respond when ill
Stress quiz
Rotter's Internal and External Locus of Control