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Journal ArticleDOI

Classification criteria for distinguishing cortisol responders from nonresponders to psychosocial stress: evaluation of salivary cortisol pulse detection in panel designs.

TLDR
Alternative classification proxies (1.5 nmol/l or 15.5% increase) are able to effectively distinguish between cortisol responders and nonresponders and should be used in future research, whenever statistical response class allocation is not feasible.
Abstract
Objective: Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis reactivity to acute stimulation is frequently assessed by repeated sampling of salivary cortisol. Researchers often strive to distinguish between individuals who show (responders) and those do not show (nonresponders) cortisol responses. For this, fixed threshold classification criteria, such as a 2.5-nmol/l baseline-to-peak increase, are frequently used. However, the performance of such criteria has not been systematically evaluated. Methods: Repeated salivary cortisol data from 504 participants exposed to either the Trier Social Stress Test (TSST; n = 309) or a placebo protocol (n = 195) were used for analyses. To obtain appropriate classifications of cortisol responders versus nonresponders, a physiologically plausible, autoregressive latent trajectory (ALT) mixture model was fitted to these data. Response classifications according to the ALT model and information on the experimental protocol (TSST versus placebo TSST) were then used to evaluate the performance of different proposed classifier proxies by receiver operating characteristics. Results: Moment structure of cortisol time series was adequately accounted for by the proposed ALT model. The commonly used 2.5-nmol/l criterion was found to be overly conservative, resulting in a high rate of 16.5% falsenegative classifications. Lowering this criterion to 1.5 nmol/l or using a percentage baseline-to-peak increase of 15.5% as a threshold yielded improved performance (39.3% and 26.7% less misclassifications, respectively). Conclusions: Alternative classification proxies (1.5 nmol/l or 15.5% increase) are able to effectively distinguish between cortisol responders and nonresponders and should be used in future research, whenever statistical response class allocation is not feasible. Key words: salivary cortisol, psychosocial stress, response criterion, nonresponder, growth mixture modeling, law of initial value. ALT = autoregressive latent trajectory; HPA = hypothalamic-pituitaryadrenal; LIV = law of initial value; rBPi = baseline-to-peak increase, calculated from raw concentrations; tBPi = baseline-to-peak increase, calculated from log-transformed concentrations; TSST =T rier Social Stress Test; %BPi = percentage increase of concentration from baseline to peak.

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Citations
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Acute stress responses of autonomous nervous system, HPA axis, and inflammatory system in posttraumatic stress disorder

TL;DR: In this paper , the Trier Social Stress Test (TSST) was used to investigate acute stress responses in PTSD patients compared with healthy controls, and the results confirmed previous findings of marked stress system dysregulations in PTSD and add to the literature on acute stress reactivity in PTSD.
Journal ArticleDOI

Stress-Induced Increase in Cortisol Negatively Affects the Consolidation of Contextual Elements of Episodic Memories.

TL;DR: Preliminary evidence that stress-induced cortisol increase negatively affects the consolidation of contextual elements of episodic memories is provided.
Journal ArticleDOI

Age and sex differences in the cortisol stress reactivity and recovery among infants exposed to prenatal psychological distress

TL;DR: In this article , the authors found that exposure to maternal prenatal depressive and anxiety symptoms associated with slower cortisol recovery among 10-week-old female infants, while an 11% enhanced recovery among 14-month-old females was associated with higher depressive, anxiety and pregnancy-related anxiety symptoms.
Journal ArticleDOI

The role of cortisol in trust behavior: Results from an experimental study on healthy controls and patients with juvenile myoclonic epilepsy.

TL;DR: The authors' results showed that there was no significant difference in trust behavior during the trust game, but a trend toward lower trust in patients, and cortisol levels correlated with trust only in the patient group, but not in the control group.
References
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Journal Article

R: A language and environment for statistical computing.

R Core Team
- 01 Jan 2014 - 
TL;DR: Copyright (©) 1999–2012 R Foundation for Statistical Computing; permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this manual provided the copyright notice and permission notice are preserved on all copies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fit indices in covariance structure modeling : Sensitivity to underparameterized model misspecification

TL;DR: In this article, the sensitivity of maximum likelihood (ML), generalized least squares (GLS), and asymptotic distribution-free (ADF)-based fit indices to model misspecification, under conditions that varied sample size and distribution.
Journal ArticleDOI

Deciding on the Number of Classes in Latent Class Analysis and Growth Mixture Modeling: A Monte Carlo Simulation Study

TL;DR: Whereas the Bayesian Information Criterion performed the best of the ICs, the bootstrap likelihood ratio test proved to be a very consistent indicator of classes across all of the models considered.
Journal ArticleDOI

The ‘Trier Social Stress Test’ – A Tool for Investigating Psychobiological Stress Responses in a Laboratory Setting

TL;DR: The results suggest that gender, genetics and nicotine consumption can influence the individual's stress responsiveness to psychological stress while personality traits showed no correlation with cortisol responses to TSST stimulation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Acute stressors and cortisol responses: a theoretical integration and synthesis of laboratory research.

TL;DR: Motivated performance tasks elicited cortisol responses if they were uncontrollable or characterized by social-evaluative threat (task performance could be negatively judged by others), when methodological factors and other stressor characteristics were controlled for.
Related Papers (5)
Trending Questions (2)
What are the psychological characteristics of cortisol non responders?

The paper does not provide information about the psychological characteristics of cortisol nonresponders.

What is the prevalence of cortisol non responders?

The prevalence of cortisol nonresponders was found to be 37.4% in the placebo TSST group.