1. Sweating the big stuff: Arousal and stress as functions of self-uncertainty and identification.
- Author
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Brown JK, Hohman ZP, Niedbala EM, and Stinnett AJ
- Subjects
- Adult, Group Processes, Humans, Uncertainty, Young Adult, Arousal physiology, Galvanic Skin Response physiology, Heart Rate physiology, Self Concept, Social Identification, Stress, Psychological physiopathology
- Abstract
Groups serve a variety of crucial functions, one of which is the provision of an identity and belief system that impart self-referent information, thereby reducing self-uncertainty. Entitative groups are more attractive for highly uncertain participants seeking groups for identification and self-uncertainty reduction than less entitative groups. The purpose of the current study was to explore how self-uncertainty impacts physiological arousal and stress responses. Using a mixed-methods design (N = 123), we found that self-uncertainty increased physiological arousal (measured via skin-conductance level) and stress responses (measured via heart rate). Furthermore, we found that uncertainty-activated physiological arousal and stress responses were decreased through identification with a high entitativity group. Our findings expand upon uncertainty identity theory by identifying physiological mechanisms that motivate uncertainty reduction., (© 2021 The Authors. Psychophysiology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Society for Psychophysiological Research.)
- Published
- 2021
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