1 / 22

The Psychophysiology of Stress: Practical Insights on Challenge and Threat

The Psychophysiology of Stress: Practical Insights on Challenge and Threat. Gabrielle Rappolt-Schlichtmann CAST; March 20, 2011. A short history and long past…. The case is the same for men: if you mutilate them in boyhood, the later growing

jeroen
Download Presentation

The Psychophysiology of Stress: Practical Insights on Challenge and Threat

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Psychophysiology of Stress: Practical Insights on Challenge and Threat Gabrielle Rappolt-Schlichtmann CAST; March 20, 2011

  2. A short history and long past… The case is the same for men: if you mutilate them in boyhood, the later growing hair never comes, and the voice never changes but remains high pitched; if they be mutilated in early manhood, the late growths of hair quit them except the growth on the groin, and that diminishes but does not entirely depart. “History of Animals” Aristotle, about 350 BC

  3. Intracrine Mediation Intracrine substances regulate Intracellular events Autocrine Mediation Autocrine substances “feedback” to influence the same cells that secreted them In Sum A set of “Broadcast Systems” with several levels of mediation Paracrine Mediation Paracrine cells secrete chemicals that affect adjacent cells Endocrine Mediation Endocrine cells secrete chemicals that affect cells at distant target locations Ectocrine Mediation Ectocrine substances are released into the environment by individuals to affect other individuals

  4. The hypothalamus (a part of the brain) activates, controls and integrates the peripheral autonomic mechanisms, endocrine activity, and many somatic functions, e.g., general regulation of water balance, body temperature, sleep, and food intake, and the development of secondary sex characteristics. The pituitary (2 distinct small oval glands attached to the hypothalamus), produces various secretions that directly or indirectly effect most basic body functions.

  5. Hormones are chemical messengers produced and released by specialized glands • Released into the bloodstream where they travel to act on target organs some distance from their origin • Can operate over a greater distance from their origin and with much greater temporal range than neurotransmitters • Hormones coordinate the physiology and behavior of an animal by regulating , integrating, and controlling bodily function

  6. Biology Behavior/Ecology….

  7. Behavior/Ecology Biology… • No differences in testosterone • levels among male fans • before the game • Change in testosterone between • the beginning of the game and the • end of the game was larger, in the • positive direction for male fans of • the winning team Ecology Another Level of Coordination: The same hormones that affect the presence or absence of mating behaviors also affect the production/maturation of the reproductive system Biology Behavior

  8. Increase immediate availability of energy • Increase oxygen intake • Inhibit growth, digestion, immune function, • reproductive function, pain perception • Increase blood flow to important flight/flight • areas • Enhancement of memory/performance

  9. Defining Emotion • Your Definitions?? • The emotional experience is the experience of the situation as interpreted by the organism (Frijda, 1986) • Emotions motivate behavior but they decouple behavior from perception of the stimulus so that reconsideration is possible (Scherer, 1984). • Emotions are the patterns of perception, or rather interpretation, and their correlates in the central and peripheral nervous systems (Ellsworth, 1994; Roseman & Smith, 2001; Scherer, 2001). • Emotions are biological processes that organize human behavior by constraining thought and action as the environment is appraised as either beneficial or threatening (Fischer & Bidell, 1998; Frijda, 1986; Lazarus, 1991).

  10. Appraisal Theory – Core Concepts • Appraisal: direct, immediate and intuitive evaluations, to account for qualitative distinctions among emotions • Appraisals result in action tendencies which are experienced as emotions • Richard Lazarus (1966) • Primary & secondary appraisal

  11. Appraisal Theory – Core Concepts • Emotions are characterized by their enormous variability and subtle distinctions • The experience of emotion is continuous • Emotions are processes (Roseman & Smith, 2001)

  12. The Stress System; Two Halves of a Whole

  13. The Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Adrenal (HPA) axis Responds to sustained stresses in response to the Sympathetic Nervous System Stress Causes the Sympathetic Nervous System to Activate + Stimulates Hypothalamus Releases Corticotropin Releasing Hormone (CRH) - Inhibits + Stimulates Anterior Pituitary Releases Adrenocorticotropic Releasing Hormone (ACTH) - Inhibits + Stimulates Adrenal Gland Releases Cortisol

  14. Can examine cortisol in response to an acute stressor… Or as it changes over the course of the day…

  15. Emotion & Cognition • Declarative memory function is impaired following the administration of acute or chronic synthetic cortisol in high doses (for a review, Lupien and McEwen, 1997). • Improved memory performance with moderate cortisol increases (Lupien et al., 1999). • Working memory, initiation and cessation of action, abstract and conceptual thinking, cognitive flexibility and response to novelty, and goal directed behavior are also impacted by stress/emotion (Baddeley, 1995; Luria, 1966; Fuster, 1980).

  16. So what? • What you “know” and “understand” is dynamic, not static. • Emotion organizes, drives, amplifies, and attenuates all students’ observed thinking and reasoning. • How kids experience school on a psycho-physiologic level is highly dependant on their prior experiences of school and at home.

  17. Motivation and Emotion in Education The most effective classroom environments work hard to engage and motivate students (Brophy, 1981; Pressley, et al., 2003). Student motivation for, interest in, and value placed on education declines substantially over the course of formal schooling (Eccles, Wigfield, & Schiefele, 1998; Gottfried, Fleming, & Gottfried, 2001; Wigfield & Eccles, 2002). Classroom experiences and instructional practices can enhance student engagement to support academic achievement (Stipek, 1996, 2002; Turner, 1995). Yet, evidenced-based strategies for supporting the development of students’ motivation and academic emotion are rarely instituted in any systematic or meaningful way in classrooms (Brophy, 1998; Guthrie & Alao, 1997; Stipek, 1996, 2002).

  18. Resources Demands Level of danger Knowledge Abilities Degree of uncertainty Dispositional characteristics Perceived amount of required effort Available external support

  19. The Unbearable Automaticity of Being…

  20. UDL Affect Guidelines: Multiple Means of Engagement Provide options for recruiting interest • Options that increase individual choice and autonomy • Options that enhance relevance value and authenticity • Options that reduce threats and distractions Provide options for sustaining effort and persistence • Options that heighten salience of goals and objectives • Options that vary levels of challenge and support • Options that foster collaboration and cooperation • Options that increase mastery-oriented feedback Provide options for self-regulation • Options that guide personal goal setting and expectations • Options that scaffold coping skills and strategies • Options that develop self-assessment and reflection

  21. Building Resources – Reducing Threats, Supporting Challenge Instruction: • Make demands, purposes and real world significance clear • Give challenging tasks that can be differentiated by skill level • Allow students to move at their own pace • Tasks should allow for substantive, intellectual work • Focus on big ideas rather than small fragmented skills or concepts • Give open ended, multi dimensional tasks with support • Encourage participation, exploration and experimentation • Allow choice/support student interest Evaluation: • De-emphasize external evaluation • Base grades at least in part on effort, improvement and standards rather than relative performance • Emphasize info contained in grades • Make grading criteria clear and fair • Provide substantive, informative feedback rather than just grades or scores • Monitor learning and understanding through formative assessment • Hold students accountable • Emphasize the value/”smartness” in errors and help seeking

More Related