Psychology Chapter 11 Stress and Health
Type A
Friedman and Rosenman's term for competitive, hard-driving, impatient, verbally aggressive, and anger-prone people
Type B
Friedman and Rosenman's term for easygoing, relaxed people
Julia is awoken in the middle of the night to the sound of breaking glass. Her increased heart rate and respiration can BEST be explained as:
a fight-or-flight response
health psychology
a subfield of psychology that provides psychology's contribution to behavioral medicine
Abdul has just discovered his term paper is due tomorrow when he thought it was due next week. According to Hans Selye, Abdul will likely be experiencing the _____ stage of the general adaptation syndrome.
alarm
Phase 1: Alarm Reaction (GAS)
as your sympathetic nervous system is suddenly activated. Your heart rate zooms. Blood is diverted to your skeletal muscles. You feel the faintness of shock. With your resources mobilized, you are now ready to fight back.
People tend to use emotion-focused, rather than problem-focused, coping strategies when they:
believe they cannot change a stressful situation
One effective strategy for reducing angry feelings is to:
count to 10
In the 1990s, Alanis Morissette sang that "a traffic jam when you're already late" is ironic. While it actually may not be ironic, this situation is indeed a(n):
daily hassle
Sarah recently had a routine medical test conducted. Her doctor contacted her and told her that there were some irregularities and further tests were needed. While Sarah was concerned about the results, she dealt with her stress by talking to friends, spending time with her family, and staying busy. This is an example of _____ coping.
emotion-focused
Lorna examines how social support may buffer the negative effects of stigma on the well-being of HIV-positive gay men of color. Lorna is MOST likely a(n) _____ psychologist.
health
Macrophages
identify, pursue, and ingest harmful invaders and worn-out cells
catharsis
in psychology, the idea that "releasing" aggressive energy (through action or fantasy) relieves aggressive urges
When people speak of "being proactive" or "getting in front of a situation," they usually mean tackling an obstacle head-on so that it does not become a bigger issue. These phrases MOST clearly suggest _____ coping.
problem-focused
Individuals who have an internal locus of control generally have:
less obesity
Destroying worn-out cells is to _____ as attacking diseased cells is to _____.
macrophages, natural killer cells
Sandy participated in a research project in college, and she was identified as being happier than average. During a follow-up study 20 years later, researchers found all of these EXCEPT Sandy was:
more likely to have met all of her life goals than less happy peers
B lymphocytes
release antibodies that fight bacterial infections.
Process is to event as _____ is to _____.
stress, stressor
Religiously active AIDS patients _____ than do their nonreligious counterparts.
survive longer
Stress
the process by which we perceive and respond to certain events, called stressors , that we appraise as threatening or challenging
Psychoneuroimmunology
the study of how psychological, neural, and endocrine processes together affect the immune system and resulting health
tend-and-befriend response
under stress, people (especially women) often provide support to others (tend) and bond with and seek support from others (befriend)
_____ lymphocytes fight bacterial infections.
B
When Jason, aged 10, comes home from school, he is often very loud, energetic, and sometimes irritable. His mother is worried about his impulsiveness, but is unsure if it is a problem because he seems to act this way only when he has had school that day and his teacher describes him as well-behaved in the classroom. What is the BEST explanation for his after-school behavior?
Jason used up his energy for self-control in school
Jennifer was driving her car to school when it broke down. Which statement is true?
Jennifer's feelings of frustration are a stress reaction
general adaptation syndrome (GAS)
Selye's concept of the body's adaptive response to stress in three phases—alarm, resistance, exhaustion
T lymphocytes
attack cancer cells, viruses, and foreign substances
natural killer cells (NK cells)
attack diseased cells (such as those infected by viruses or cancer)
Relative _____ refers to the perception that one is worse off relative to those with whom one compares oneself.
deprivation
Many people report feeling happier after performing random acts of kindness. This is an example of:
doing good promoting feeling good
After breaking up with her boyfriend, Kathy alleviated her stress by avoiding contact with her ex-boyfriend and by planning recreational activities with her best girlfriend. Kathy's behavior BEST illustrates:
emotion-focused coping
coronary heart disease
the clogging of the vessels that nourish the heart muscle; the leading cause of death in many developed countries
Mandisa is under an extreme amount of stress. She is battling with her ex-husband about money and their children. In this time of stress, Mandisa turns to her friends for support and spends as much time with her children as possible. Taylor and colleagues would say that she is responding to stress according to which model?
tend and befriend
With each new accomplishment, each career advance, and each raise, Joe somehow feels that it is still not enough. Joe's example BEST illustrates:
the adaptation-level phenomenon
Phase 3: Exhaustion (GAS)
you become more vulnerable to illness or even, in extreme cases, collapse and death
Phase 2: Resistance (GAS)
your temperature, blood pressure, and respiration remain high. Your adrenal glands pump hormones into your bloodstream. You are fully engaged, summoning all your resources to meet the challenge. As time passes, with no relief from stress, your body's reserves dwindle.