Self-Efficacy as a Moderator of Perceived Control Effects on Cardiovascular Reactivity
- 1 January 1995
- journal article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Psychosomatic Medicine
- Vol. 57 (4) , 390-397
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00006842-199507000-00011
Abstract
We have found that enhanced control has an attenuating effect on cardiovascular reactivity when effort of responding is maintained constant; however, not all individuals will react to increased control in the same manner. In the present study, 40 subjects engaged in a mental arithmetic task under high control (self-paced) and low control (externally paced) conditions. Subjects' self-efficacy concerning this task was assessed. As expected, significant main effects were found for control condition, with high control producing smaller blood pressure and heart rate changes than low control (11.4 vs. 20.4 mm Hg (systolic blood pressure), 4.4 vs. 11.4 mm Hg (diastolic blood pressure), and 6.2 vs. 7.9 beats per minute (heart rate)). No main effects were found for self-efficacy. However, the interaction between control and self-efficacy was significant for systolic blood pressure and heart rate and marginally significant for diastolic blood pressure; post hoc tests showed that this was due to the effect of self-efficacy classification under high control conditions; subjects with low self-efficacy for the mental arithmetic task evidenced cardiovascular changes that were significantly greater than those of the high self-efficacy group (8.0 vs. 14.8 mm Hg (systolic blood pressure), 2.7 vs. 6.1 mm Hg (diastolic blood pressure), and 5.2 vs. 7.1 beats per minute (heart rate). The data suggest that the reactivity observed during active coping is due in part to the effort of responding and in part to the match between the demands of the task and certain mastery-related attributes of the individual.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- The multi-dimensional nature of active coping: differential effects of effort and enhanced control on cardiovascular reactivity.Psychosomatic Medicine, 1992
- Social support in social interaction: a moderator of cardiovascular reactivity.Psychosomatic Medicine, 1992
- Social support reduces cardiovascular reactivity to psychological challenge: a laboratory model.Psychosomatic Medicine, 1990
- Cardiovascular Responses to Behvioral Stress and Hypertension: A Meta-Analytic ReviewAnnals of Behavioral Medicine, 1990
- Behaviorally-Evoked Cardiovascular Reactivity and Hypertension: Conceptual Issues and Potential AssociationsAnnals of Behavioral Medicine, 1990
- Activation Patterns to Aversive Stimulation in Man: Passive Exposure Versus Effort to ControlPsychophysiology, 1985
- Stress, helplessness and control: The implications of laboratory studiesJournal of Psychosomatic Research, 1983
- Cardiovascular Response to Stress: Effects of Opportunity to Avoid, Shock Experience, and Performance FeedbackPsychophysiology, 1980
- Cognitive Control Factors in Vascular Stress ResponsesPsychophysiology, 1975
- Availability of avoidance behaviors in modulating vascular-stress responses.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1971