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Journal ArticleDOI

Stress Responses in Male and Female Engineering Students

Aila Collins, +1 more
- 01 Jun 1978 - 
- Vol. 4, Iss: 2, pp 43-48
TLDR
Male and female engineering students were studies under stress induced by a congnitive-conflict task and in a control condition spent in inactivity, showing sex differences on the subjective level were not reflected in actual performance.
Abstract
Male and female engineering students were studies under stress induced by a congnitive-conflict task and in a control condition spent in inactivity. The results showed that (a) in the control condition the sexes did not differ in adrenaline, noradrenaline or cortisol excretion, whereas heart rate was significantly higher in the females; (b) adrenaline excretion and heart rate increased significantly in both sexes during stress; (c) the rise in adrenaline excretion was more pronounced in the males, whereas the rise in heart rate was significantly greater in the females; (d) cortisol excretion increased significantly during stress in the male group only; and (e) self-estimates of effort and performance were consistently higher and increased more over time in the males than in the females, bu these sex differences on the subjective level were not reflected in actual performance. The interaction of biological and social factors in the development of sex differences in stress reactions is discussed.

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Citations
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Biobehavioral responses to stress in females: tend-and-befriend, not fight-or-flight.

TL;DR: It is proposed that, behaviorally, females' responses to stress are more marked by a pattern of "tend-and-befriend," and neuroendocrine evidence from animal and human studies suggests that oxytocin, in conjunction with female reproductive hormones and endogenous opioid peptide mechanisms, may be at its core.
Journal ArticleDOI

HPA axis responses to laboratory psychosocial stress in healthy elderly adults, younger adults, and children: impact of age and gender.

TL;DR: The observed ACTH response patterns in young and elderly adults may suggest that a heightened hypothalamic drive in young men decreases with age, resulting in similar ACTH responses in elderly men and women, as well as a greater adrenal cortex sensitivity to ACTH signals in young females.
Journal ArticleDOI

Consistent sex differences in cortisol responses to psychological stress.

TL;DR: It is concluded that the observed sex difference in cortisol responses to psychological stress does not reflect an overall lower responsiveness of the female adrenal cortex and suggests sex differences in cognitive and/or emotional responses to distressing psychosocial situations which in turn may influence cortisol secretion.
Journal ArticleDOI

The effects of perceived stress, traits, mood states, and stressful daily events on salivary cortisol

TL;DR: Although perceived stress, anxiety, and depression did not increase cortisol reactivity to daily events, evidence for reduced habituation to recurrent events in subjects scoring high on these traits is found, suggesting that negative affectivity is not just a confounder but is related to elevated cortisol secretion during normal daily activities.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Improved technique for the fluorimetric estimation of catecholamines.

TL;DR: By the addition of small amounts of ethylene diamine (EDA) to the alkali-ascorbic acid mixture used in the trihydroxyindole (THI) method the discoloration of reaction mixture and instability of fluorescence can be prevented, allowing blanks to maintain their fluorescence values for several hours.
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Noradrenaline release from isolated nerve granules.

TL;DR: Nerve granules are more sensitive to temperature than adrenal medullary granules but show higher resistance to freezing and thawing and osmotic changes, and noradrenaline is rapidly released even at low temperature at pH 4 and below, and by detergents.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Radioimmunoassay for Cortisol in Plasma and Urine

TL;DR: Antibodies raised against cortisol-21-hemisuccinate conjugated to bovine serum albumin had a high affinity for cortisol, making this method particularly useful for measurement of 24-hr urine free cortisol.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sex Differences in Psychoneuroendocrine Reactions to Examination Stress

TL;DR: Both sexes performed equally well in the examination, but self‐reports showed that feelings of success and confidence were common among males, whereas feelings of discomfort and failure dominated in the female group.
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