Empathic stress in the family: Does diurnal cortisol covariation between adolescents and their parents influence adolescent empathic stress in the laboratory?
Jost Ulrich Blasberg, Philipp Kanske, Veronika Engert
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Empathic stress is the reproduction of psychological and physiological stress activation in an observer of a directly stressed target individual. It likely allows us to allocate the energy necessary to jointly alleviate a stressor at hand. The tendency to show such an empathic or "second-hand" stress response depends on the relationship between target and observer. Here, we investigated whether adolescents' empathic stress responses to their parents' acute stress experience were associated with the diurnal cortisol covariation the parent-adolescent dyad shared in everyday life. Fathers and mothers (N = 77) were confronted with a standardized laboratory stressor, the Trier Social Stress Test, while their adolescent children (13-16 years old) were watching. In the laboratory, parents and their adolescent children simultaneously provided multiple samples of salivary cortisol. On the weekend following the testing session, dyads provided diurnal cortisol samples over two days. These were used to gain a measure of the dyads' adrenocortical physiological attunement in everyday life. We found that the degree to which dyads covaried in their diurnal cortisol activity significantly increased adolescents' tendency for empathic stress responding in the laboratory. The amount of time that dyads spent together over the weekend, adolescents' attachment experiences, dyad type (father-daughter, mother-daughter, father-son, mother-son), and adolescents' puberty status did not significantly alter this relationship. Adolescent attachment avoidance, however, was negatively correlated with both adolescents' cortisol stress reactivity in the laboratory and the degree to which they covaried with their parents' diurnal cortisol release. We conclude that diurnal cortisol covariation between parents and adolescents is positively associated with stress resonance in the laboratory.
期刊介绍:
Psychoneuroendocrinology publishes papers dealing with the interrelated disciplines of psychology, neurobiology, endocrinology, immunology, neurology, and psychiatry, with an emphasis on multidisciplinary studies aiming at integrating these disciplines in terms of either basic research or clinical implications. One of the main goals is to understand how a variety of psychobiological factors interact in the expression of the stress response as it relates to the development and/or maintenance of neuropsychiatric illnesses.