Self-compassion training modulates alpha-amylase, heart rate variability, and subjective responses to social evaluative threat in women

JJ Arch, KW Brown, DJ Dean, LN Landy…�- …, 2014 - Elsevier
JJ Arch, KW Brown, DJ Dean, LN Landy, KD Brown, ML Laudenslager
Psychoneuroendocrinology, 2014Elsevier
A growing body of research has revealed that social evaluative stressors trigger biological
and psychological responses that in chronic forms have been linked to aging and disease.
Recent research suggests that self-compassion may protect the self from typical defensive
responses to evaluation. We investigated whether brief training in self-compassion
moderated biopsychological responses to the Trier Social Stress Test (TSST) in women.
Compared to attention (placebo) and no-training control conditions, brief self-compassion�…
Summary
A growing body of research has revealed that social evaluative stressors trigger biological and psychological responses that in chronic forms have been linked to aging and disease. Recent research suggests that self-compassion may protect the self from typical defensive responses to evaluation. We investigated whether brief training in self-compassion moderated biopsychological responses to the Trier Social Stress Test (TSST) in women. Compared to attention (placebo) and no-training control conditions, brief self-compassion training diminished sympathetic (salivary alpha-amylase), cardiac parasympathetic, and subjective anxiety responses, though not HPA-axis (salivary cortisol) responses to the TSST. Self-compassion training also led to greater self-compassion under threat relative to the control groups. In that social stress pervades modern life, self-compassion represents a promising approach to diminishing its potentially negative psychological and biological effects.
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