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    Examining the Roles of Acceptance, Suppression and Other Therapeutic Strategies in Anxiety and Relaxation


    Wilson, Christopher (2009) Examining the Roles of Acceptance, Suppression and Other Therapeutic Strategies in Anxiety and Relaxation. PhD thesis, National University of Ireland Maynooth.

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    Abstract

    The current thesis examined the influence of acceptance, suppression and other coping strategies on levels of physiological and self-reported anxiety, induced experimentally by academic tasks. The research program comprised four automated experimental studies. Chapter 1 provides a review of the available literature on relaxation techniques, including empirical evidence of their utility, theories of underlying processes and the role of various psychological strategies. Chapter 2 comprises Experiment 1 (n=60) that compared five intervention components with placebo. The first part of the intervention comprised Progressive Muscle Relaxation (PMR) Training or Placebo, coupled thereafter with a specific strategy that was intended to supplement the PMR Training/Placebo in terms of reducing participant anxiety induced by the academic test. Specifically, participants were instructed to engage in acceptance or suppression (or placebo) in response to task-induced anxiety. Mean skin conductance level (SCL) increased for all conditions from Baseline- Test, suggesting that the target academic test did increase physiological anxiety, as predicted. Subjective anxiety also increased significantly and subjective relaxation decreased significantly from pre- to post-experiment. Mean SCL decreased for all conditions from Test-Post-test/intervention, suggesting some small influence for the interventions and/or for practice (because Placebo also changed). Although we predicted that the Acceptance Instruction would be associated with smaller increases in anxiety than both Suppression and Placebo, the data from Experiment 1 indicated no significant effect for condition, hence failing to confirm this hypothesis. However, Placebo+Acceptance showed the smallest increase in anxiety from Baseline-Test, the largest decrease from Test-Post-test and the smallest overall increase from Baseline-Post-test. Nonetheless, the strong similarities across conditions made comparisons between the first and second parts of the interventions difficult. For Experiment 2 (n=20) reported in Chapter 3, a new type of anxiety-inducing academic test was constructed that involved an on-going stressor and the repeated introduction of a visual stimulus (a neutral image), which the Suppression group only (not Control) were instructed to suppress. In theory, the continued effort of suppressing the image might serve to increase anxiety levels during the task for the Suppression group, relative to participants who are not instructed to suppress the image. A secondary aim of the study was to examine whether the instruction to suppress the stimulus affected participants’ habituation to its appearance and we predicted that habituation would be disrupted in Suppression, but not in Control. Mean SCL between Baseline and Test increased significantly for participants in the Suppression Condition, but not in Control. The study also included analyses of skin conductance response (SCR) as a means of measuring habituation to the presence of the visual stimulus. The dominant pattern of responding in Control was Habituation. In contrast, response patterns in Suppression were either Inconsistent or indicative of Increasing Arousal. Experiment 3 (n=80) reported in Chapter 4 attempted to examine the efficacy of acceptance and suppression interventions, using a modified version of the task protocol developed in Experiment 2. We also examined differences in anticipatory arousal and event arousal in response to the discreet stimulus presentations. The study also included Mindfulness and Endurance Interventions, which are topographically similar to acceptance. The results from Experiment 3 confirmed some of our predictions. First, we predicted that Suppression and Placebo would be less effective at diminishing anxiety than Mindfulness and Acceptance and indeed Acceptance was the only condition that showed decreased physiological anxiety and differed significantly from the other two conditions between Tests 1 and 2. Analyses of the anticipatory arousal data indicated that Mindfulness, Suppression and Placebo decreased, while Acceptance and Endurance increased. On event arousal, all participants increased, with the largest recorded on Mindfulness, Suppression and Endurance. The differences between anticipatory and event arousal that occurred between conditions indicate that some strategies may result in expectation of decreased arousal prior to an event (i.e. reduced anticipatory arousal), but increased arousal in response to the event itself (i.e. increased event arousal), while other strategies have the opposite effect. Experiment 4 (n=95) reported in Chapter 5 attempted to examine the impact of expectation on the efficacy of acceptance and suppression, as well as the other strategies examined in Experiment 3. Experiment 4 was identical to the previous study, with the exception that the interventions were condensed and presented to participants as short strategies that were "proven to work". The primary aim of this modification was to explicitly highlight the possible influence of expectation on relaxation. We predicted that expectation would reduce the efficacy of Acceptance resulting in increased anxiety and exacerbate the effects of Suppression resulting in larger increases in anxiety from pre- to post-intervention than all other conditions. We made no specific predictions in relation to the other strategies. While the previously positive outcomes associated with Acceptance were reduced, no significant differences were found between conditions. In addition the largest increase in arousal was observed in the Mindfulness Condition, as opposed to Suppression. As such, we failed to confirm our hypotheses. Differences between anticipatory and event arousal were observed; however, patterns were different from those recorded in the previous study. The current research extends previous work on the utility of acceptance and suppression and is the first to examine the role of acceptance in a relaxation context. Overall, the findings provide evidence for the utility of acceptance as a relaxation strategy and support previous evidence that suppression can lead to increased arousal, even where the intent is to relax
    Item Type: Thesis (PhD)
    Keywords: Acceptance; Suppression; Therapeutic Strategies; Anxiety and Relaxation;
    Academic Unit: Faculty of Science and Engineering > Psychology
    Item ID: 2271
    Depositing User: IR eTheses
    Date Deposited: 19 Nov 2010 16:13
    URI: https://mu.eprints-hosting.org/id/eprint/2271
    Use Licence: This item is available under a Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial Share Alike Licence (CC BY-NC-SA). Details of this licence are available here

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