Litcius/Paper detail

Psychological Stress = Physiological Stress?

Sara Becker, Birgit Spinath, Beate Ditzen, Tobias Dörfler

2022Journal of Psychophysiology13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract. The present study analyzed experimentally the association between the experience of psychological stress and the physiological stress response of prospective teachers. The experienced stress was assessed by self-reported data. Cortisol concentrations via saliva samples reflected the physiological response. The results show no difference between the stress and the control group in the experience of psychological stress. However, the stress group had significantly increased cortisol concentrations compared to the control group. The study could not show any correlation between the two stress parameters. The results suggest that a stress response should be validated based not only on the experience of psychological stress but also on the physiological stress response. This is particularly crucial in light of the fact that the majority of studies concerning stress in teachers are limited to experiences of psychological stress so far. Due to this, the results may provide a first important contribution to a more comprehensive stress assessment for teachers.

Topics & Concepts

Stress (linguistics)Psychological stressPsychologyClinical psychologyStress measuresPhysiological stressAssociation (psychology)Fight-or-flight responseDevelopmental psychologyMedicinePhysiologyPsychotherapistPhilosophyBiochemistryGeneLinguisticsChemistryStress Responses and CortisolEmotional Intelligence and PerformanceCOVID-19 and Mental Health