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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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Assessment of the cortisol awakening response: Expert consensus guidelines.

TL;DR: Consensus guidelines are presented on central aspects of CAR assessment, including objective control of sampling accuracy/adherence, participant instructions, covariate accounting, sampling protocols, quantification strategies as well as reporting and interpreting of CAR data.
Journal ArticleDOI

The neural diathesis-stress model of schizophrenia revisited: An update on recent findings considering illness stage and neurobiological and methodological complexities.

TL;DR: An extended neural diathesis‐stress model of schizophrenia is proposed that addresses the broader neurobiological context of stress psychobiology in psychosis progression and implications of this model for best practice are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Psychological stress reactivity and future health and disease outcomes: A systematic review of prospective evidence

TL;DR: Exaggerated and blunted SAM system and HPA axis stress reactivity predicted distinct physical and mental health and disease outcomes over time and consistently indicate stress reactsivity as a predictor for future health and diseases outcomes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Intra-individual psychological and physiological responses to acute laboratory stressors of different intensity

TL;DR: These findings suggest that different stress protocols differentially stimulate various aspects of the stress response, whereas Physically demanding stress protocols such as the Ergometer test appear to be particularly suitable for evoking autonomic stress responses, whereas uncontrollable and social-evaluative threatening stressors are most likely to elicit HPA axis stress responses.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal axis response to acute psychosocial stress: Effects of biological sex and circulating sex hormones

TL;DR: Analysis of the largest sample size to date and widely used Trier Social Stress Test data confirm that men show more robust activation of the HPA axis response to the TSST than do women in the follicular phase of the menstrual cycle, and testosterone results suggest an inhibitory effect on Hpa axis reactivity in men.
References
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Book ChapterDOI

On Testing for Multivariate Normality

Tejas Desai
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compare and contrast three approaches for testing multivariate normality, namely, Mardia's skewness and kurtosis statistics and the Henze-Zirkler statistic.
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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.