Benefit of social support for resilience-building is contingent on social context: Examining cardiovascular adaptation to recurrent stress in women
Citation
Howard, S., and Hughes, B. M. (2012). ‘Benefit of social support for resilience-building is contingent on social context: Examining cardiovascular adaptation to recurrent stress in women’. Anxiety, Stress and Coping, 25, 411-423
Howard, S., and Hughes, B. M. (2012). ‘Benefit of social support for resilience-building is contingent on social context: Examining cardiovascular adaptation to recurrent stress in women’. Anxiety, Stress and Coping, 25, 411-423
Abstract
Abstract
Previous work on social support and stress tolerance using laboratory-based cardiovascular
stress response paradigms has suggested that perceived social support may be effective in
building resilience in recipients. However, such paradigms are often socially decontextualized
insofar as they fail to take account of the social aspects of stress itself. Using
90 healthy college women, the present study sought to examine the association between selfreported
perceived social support and cardiovascular stress tolerance. Participants underwent
two consecutive exposures to a mental arithmetic task. On second exposure to the stressor,
participants completed the task under either social threat or control conditions. Social threat
was manipulated using socially-salient instructions, in order to create a high social context.
Adaptation to stress was established in terms of comparisons between cardiovascular
responses to successive exposures. Results showed that cardiovascular responses tended to
habituate across time, with perceived social support associated with the degree of habituation,
but only under certain contextual conditions; high perceived support was associated with
effective habituation under control conditions only. This response pattern is consistent with
the view that high perceived social support buffers against stress in healthful ways, but only
in asocial contexts.
Keywords
Social supportCardiovascular reactivity
Cardiovascular adaptation
Stress tolerance
Social context