Alternate Cardiovascular Baseline Assessment Techniques: Vanilla or Resting Baseline

ABSTRACT The accurate evaluation of cardiovascular reactions to psychological challenge requires stable baselines against which change can be evaluated. When more than one challenge is employed, the recovery of this baseline becomes important in order to avoid carryover effects. Resting periods, eve...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychophysiology 1992-11, Vol.29 (6), p.742-750
Hauptverfasser: Jennings, J.Richard, Kamarck, Thomas, Stewart, Christopher, Eddy, Michael, Johnson, Paul
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:ABSTRACT The accurate evaluation of cardiovascular reactions to psychological challenge requires stable baselines against which change can be evaluated. When more than one challenge is employed, the recovery of this baseline becomes important in order to avoid carryover effects. Resting periods, even those of 20 min or more, do not guarantee baseline stability. We compared a 20‐min resting condition and a new form of baseline condition in 48 college men using video tasks as the psychological challenges. The new form was a minimally demanding color detection task, termed the “vanilla”baseline condition. A 10‐min version and a 20‐min version of this condition were tested. Comparisons to 10‐min resting baselines were made using our prior work and values from the literature. Vanilla baseline conditions were shown to be equal to or better than resting baseline conditions using criteria of between‐ and within‐baseline stability, amplitude and significance of responsivity, and generalizability between sessions on separate days. Ten‐minute resting baselines also showed acceptable stability, questioning the value of lengthy baselines. The good performance of the 10‐min vanilla baseline in initial and replication samples supported its utility for estimating baselines for many purposes.
ISSN:0048-5772
1469-8986
1540-5958
DOI:10.1111/j.1469-8986.1992.tb02052.x