恐音症:引发最初身体反应的证据

T. Dozier, Leighton A Grampp, Michelle E. Lopez
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引用次数: 4

摘要

恐音症是一种未被充分研究的病症,通常被认为是对特定的轻柔声音和视觉刺激极度敏感,这些声音和视觉刺激会引发强烈的负面情绪和生理唤醒。最近使用自我报告测量的研究表明,恐音症包括诱发的身体应答(例如骨骼肌退缩)。利用肌电图(EMG)和直接观察,验证了三名恐音参与者对触发刺激的即时身体反应。当受试者报告有中度到强烈的反应时,在每个受试者身上观察到一致的身体运动,尽管每个受试者的位置是独特的。这种反应似乎在短暂的听觉刺激开始时立即发生,并在开始时和整个较长的视觉刺激中发生。此外,肌电图测量的反应在一个参与者中是一致的,当有强烈的自我报告反应时,另一个参与者也会出现。肌电图测量的反应潜伏期为几百毫秒,表明反应是由恐音触发刺激引起的,而不是一般的生理唤醒。这为这些恐音症患者对恐音刺激产生的生理反应提供了经验证据。这支持将恐音症概念化为一种包括由恐音触发刺激引起的应答行为(如肌肉退缩)的条件。这突出了需要进一步研究对恐音刺激和经典条件反射的诱发生理反应作为这种反应发展的机制。
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Misophonia: Evidence for an Elicited Initial Physical Response
Misophonia is an understudied condition that is commonly viewed as an extreme sensitivity to specific soft sounds and visual stimuli which elicit strong negative emotions and physiological arousal. Recent research using self-report measures indicates that misophonia includes an elicited physical respondent (e.g. skeletal muscle flinch). Using electromyography (EMG) and direct observation, an immediate physical response to trigger stimuli was verified in three misophonic participants. Consistent movement of the body was observed in each subject when the subject reported having a moderate to strong response, though the location was unique for each subject. The response appeared to be immediate with the onset of a brief auditory stimulus and occurred at the start and throughout longer visual trigger stimuli. Additionally, an EMG measured response was consistent in one participant, and occurred in another participant when there was a strong self-reported response. Response latency for the EMG measured response was several hundred milliseconds, indicating the responses were elicited by the misophonic trigger stimulus and not general physiological arousal. This provides empirical evidence of an elicited physical response to misophonic stimuli in these individuals with misophonia. This supports conceptualization of misophonia as a condition which includes a respondent behavior (e.g. muscle flinch) elicited by the misophonic trigger stimulus. This highlights the need for additional research on the elicited physical response to misophonic stimuli and classical conditioning as a mechanism for the development of such a response.
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