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Emotion Self-Regulation, Psychophysiological Coherence, and Test Anxiety: Results from an Experiment Using Electrophysiological Measures

This study investigated the effects of a novel, classroom-based emotion self-regulation program (TestEdge) on measures of test anxiety, socioemotional function, test performance, and heart rate variability (HRV) in high school students. The program teaches students how to self-generate a specific ps...

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Published in:Applied psychophysiology and biofeedback 2010-12, Vol.35 (4), p.261-283
Main Authors: Bradley, Raymond Trevor, McCraty, Rollin, Atkinson, Mike, Tomasino, Dana, Daugherty, Alane, Arguelles, Lourdes
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container_title Applied psychophysiology and biofeedback
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creator Bradley, Raymond Trevor
McCraty, Rollin
Atkinson, Mike
Tomasino, Dana
Daugherty, Alane
Arguelles, Lourdes
description This study investigated the effects of a novel, classroom-based emotion self-regulation program (TestEdge) on measures of test anxiety, socioemotional function, test performance, and heart rate variability (HRV) in high school students. The program teaches students how to self-generate a specific psychophysiological state— psychophysiological coherence —which has been shown to improve nervous system function, emotional stability, and cognitive performance. Implemented as part of a larger study investigating the population of tenth grade students in two California high schools ( N  = 980), the research reported here was conducted as a controlled pre- and post-intervention laboratory experiment, using electrophysiological measures, on a random stratified sample of students from the intervention and control schools ( N  = 136). The Stroop color-word conflict test was used as the experiment’s stimulus to simulate the stress of taking a high-stakes test, while continuous HRV recordings were gathered. The post-intervention electrophysiological results showed a pattern of improvement across all HRV measures, indicating that students who received the intervention program had learned how to better manage their emotions and to self-activate the psychophysiological coherence state under stressful conditions. Moreover, students with high test anxiety exhibited increased HRV and heart rhythm coherence even during a resting baseline condition (without conscious use of the program’s techniques), suggesting that they had internalized the benefits of the intervention. Consistent with these results, students exhibited reduced test anxiety and reduced negative affect after the intervention. Finally, there is suggestive evidence from a matched-pairs analysis that reduced test anxiety and increased psychophysiological coherence appear to be directly associated with improved test performance—a finding consistent with evidence from the larger study.
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The post-intervention electrophysiological results showed a pattern of improvement across all HRV measures, indicating that students who received the intervention program had learned how to better manage their emotions and to self-activate the psychophysiological coherence state under stressful conditions. Moreover, students with high test anxiety exhibited increased HRV and heart rhythm coherence even during a resting baseline condition (without conscious use of the program’s techniques), suggesting that they had internalized the benefits of the intervention. Consistent with these results, students exhibited reduced test anxiety and reduced negative affect after the intervention. 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subjects Adolescent
Analysis
Analysis of Variance
Anxiety
Anxiety - physiopathology
Behavioral Science and Psychology
Emotions - physiology
Female
Health Psychology
Heart beat
Heart Rate - physiology
Humans
Industry self-regulation
Laws, regulations and rules
Male
Medical tests
Psychology
Psychotherapy and Counseling
Public Health
Social Control, Informal - methods
Stress, Psychological - physiopathology
Students
Surveys and Questionnaires
Test anxiety
title Emotion Self-Regulation, Psychophysiological Coherence, and Test Anxiety: Results from an Experiment Using Electrophysiological Measures
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