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Journal ArticleDOI

Delayed habituation of the electrodermal orienting response as a function of increased level of arousal.

Gunilla Bohlin
- 01 Jul 1976 - 
- Vol. 13, Iss: 4, pp 345-351
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TLDR
Level of arousal was manipulated by having subjects perform arithmetic tasks during a habituation procedure, which consisted of 55 presentations or a 1000 Hz tone, and a threat of shock was added to the task performance in order to include aspects of stress in the arousal manipulation.
Abstract
Level of arousal was manipulated by having subjects perform arithmetic tasks during a habituation procedure, which consisted of 55 presentations or a 1000 Hz 80 dB tone For one group a threat of shock was added to the task performance in order to include aspects of stress in the arousal manipulation These two groups were compared with a group who heard the same stimuli but were simply instructed to relax The three groups differed in level of arousal according to KEG signs of drowsiness, skin conductance level, and frequency of spontaneous skin conductance responses, All three groups differed from each other in number of trials to habituation criterion for skin conductance responses to stimuli Since the delay of habituation was seen tin- both the Task group and the Shock-threat group, it was concluded that the effect was not bound to aspects of stress but was a general effect of increased arousal For vasomotor responses an analysis in terms of habituation was difficult to apply because the two high arousal groups were very unresponsive from the beginning

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Behavioral and cognitive consequences of reciprocal versus compensatory responses to preinteraction expectancies.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed that there are two basic interaction strategies by means of which a perceiver's preinteraction impression of a target person can mediate both the perceiver and the target's subsequent interaction behavior.
Journal ArticleDOI

'Preparedness' and 'arousability' as determinants of electrodermal conditioning.

TL;DR: The high-aroused group with phobic stimuh showed diffuse responding during acquisition, not differentiating between reinforced and unreinforced cues, but it was the only group that failed to extinguish during 20 trials, which indicates that high arousal gives superior resistance to extinction particularly for phobic stimuli.
Journal ArticleDOI

Individual differences in habituation of human physiological responses: a review of theory, method, and findings in the study of personality correlates in non-clinical populations.

TL;DR: Studies up to 1976 of the relationship between psychometrically defined dimensions of personality and individual differences in habituation of EEG and autonomic responses were examined, finding that anxiety as defined by the Manifest Anxiety Scale is related to habits of the finger vasomotor response but probably not to habituated of the electrodermal response.
Journal ArticleDOI

Electrodermal lability and myocardial reactivity to stress.

TL;DR: A positive relationship between electrodermal lability and beta-adrenergic myocardial reactivity to stress, particularly under conditions of task novelty or uncertainty, is supported, and it is suggested that electrodermally lability is related fundamentally to arousal and reactivity processes.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A physiological model of phobic anxiety and desensitization.

TL;DR: An alternative explanation consistent with the above postulate states that the underlying mechanism of systematic desensitization is identical with that of habituation proceeding under optimal conditions (the “maximal habituation” hypothesis).
Journal ArticleDOI

The orienting reflex during waking and sleeping

TL;DR: There was little, if any, habituation of the OR during sleep, and the presence of a stimulus-evoked K complex was associated with increased responsiveness in all autonomic variables, but presence of eye movement bursts wasassociated with decreased cardiovascular response to the tone.
Journal ArticleDOI

Self-reported arousal: further development of a multi-factorial inventory.

TL;DR: The previously presented inventory of self-reported arousal, which contained four factor analytically derived scales, was further developed in the following way: the original factor pattern was cross-validated and a new response scale was constructed which proved to be superior to the old one.
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