Garantie de satisfaction à 100% Disponible immédiatement après paiement En ligne et en PDF Tu n'es attaché à rien 4,6 TrustPilot
logo-home
Resume

Summary Mental Load & Stress

Note
-
Vendu
-
Pages
31
Publié le
08-02-2023
Écrit en
2020/2021

Full Summary Mental Load & Stress Psychology Course Radboud University Nijmegen

Établissement
Cours

Aperçu du contenu

Mental load & Stress

Week 1: Societal and Theoretical Background
• Stressor: event or set of conditions that causes a stress response (workload)
• Stress: short term response to the stressor (tired)
• Strain: longer term reaction to chronic stress (exhausted, high heart rate)
o Lower with social support
• stress as:
o stimulus-based/engineering approach: response (biology): Selye
▪ non-specific response of the body to any demand made upon it
▪ no distinction between positive and negative
▪ actually meant strain
▪ psychological, physiological, behavioral reactions
▪ General Adaptation Syndrome: fails to include role of psychosocial
factors of stress
• Alarm: fight-flight: adrenaline -> HPA -> ACTH -> cortisol
• Resistance: adaptation, on physiological level
o HPA predominates
o Ability to withstand new stressors is limited
• Exhaustion: susceptible to illness, chronic
▪ Distress vs eustress: Yerkes-Dodson Law
▪ Biological tradition: Stress is good for short-term, but maladaptive for
long-term
o Response-based/medico-physiological approach: characteristic of
environment (epidemiology): Holmes & Rahe
▪ a force or pressure exerted upon a material object or person
▪ psychosocial aspects = stress
▪ actually meant stressor
▪ Social Readjustment Rating Scale: long list with scores
▪ Limitations: different coping, experience subjective, retrospective
▪ Epidemiological tradition: stress is objective -> wrong -> stressors as
events that are consensually seen as undesirable or threatening
o Interaction-appraisal approach: interaction between person and
environment (psychology): Lazarus & Folkman
▪ stress is a relationship between the person and the environment, that is
appraised by the person as taxing or exceeding his or her resources and
endangering his or her well-being
▪ cognitive appraisal
• primary appraisal: demand is irrelevant, good or stressful
o harm-loss
o threat
o challenge
• secondary appraisal: coping
▪ stress and coping theory
• situation -> primary appraisal -> neutral/neg/pos -> secondary
appraisal – (situation/person) > coping -> re-appraisal ->
primary appraisal
• if situation = neg and coping options = insufficient, then: stress
▪ Psychological tradition: Threat appraisals and coping appraisals


1

, o process: Rabkin & Struening
▪ stress is the organism’s response to stressful conditions consisting of a
pattern of physiological and psychological reactions, both immediate
and delayed
▪ situation -> disruption -> recovery
• disruption -> cumulation -> illness
▪ McEwen’s allostatic load theory:
• Homeostasis: equilibrium between sympathetic and
parasympathetic NS (hormones)
• Allostasis: “functional” changes in equilibrium
o Concession to environmental demands
• Allostatic load: physical and mental cost of disturbed
equilibrium -> This is bad!
o Repeated hits
o Lack of adaptation
o Prolonged response: ruminating
o Inadequate response: other symptoms have to make up
for it, also not good
• 4 factors that can lead to increased allostatic load:
o Amount of exposure
o Magnitude or reactivity
o Rate of recovery
o Resource restoration: amount of sleep
▪ How stressful life demands cause increased risk of disease
(see picture)
• Transactional stress theory (Lazarus & Folkman): daily hassles and
uplifts approach
• Conservation of resources theory: resource-based model of stress
• High stress reactivity and low stress recovery can lead to illnesses.
• 4 factors that are always the same for stress:
o Important situation
o Inability or unwillingness to retreat from the situation
o Loss of control
o High arousal, distracting thoughts and always accompanied by
emotions
• Cognitive or mental load: an efficient and healthy way to react to a challenge.
Activation via extra energy to realize efficient performance (studying)
o Mental load – (overload) > stress – (degree of exposure, duration) > effects:
health, performance, employability




2

,• Behavioral distress: tobacco abuse, alcohol abuse, drug abuse, accidents and
aggression, dietary extremes
• Psychological distress: anxiety, burnout (1. Emotional exhaustion, 2.
Depersonalization or cynicism, 3. Reduces personal accomplishment), depression,
sleep disturbances, family problems, sexual dysfunction
• Medical distress: coronary heart disease and stroke, cancer (increase tobacco
consumption + decreased immune system), pain and musculoskeletal injuries,
headache, diabetes mellitus, additional medical distress, positive effects of eustress

• Changing world of work:
o Increased internationalization and competition
o New technology
o Changed configuration of workforce (more women)
o High performance: high quality and low costs
o Flexibility: structural, functional, numerical, geographic, job-based,
quantitative (overtime), qualitative

• Changes in work characteristics:
o Decrease job security, increase sickness absence
o More demands due to increase technology
o Work-home interactions
o New organizational practices (call centers)
o Overtime work




3

, Week 2: The Stress Response
• Walter Cannon -> homeostasis, fight-flight-(freeze) response
• Stress response as: Hierarchy of correcting actions
o Level of cells and organs (cold)
o ANS + endocrine system
▪ CNS -> PNS -> ANS (sympathetic + parasympathetic) + SNS
▪ When rats trapped: pee (parasympathetic)
o Brainstem: reticular formation
o Hypothalamus
▪ Pink = pituitary gland
▪ PVN secretes CRF
▪ Autonomic (green = SAM (fast)) division vs Endocrine (blue = HPA
(slow)) division
▪ Adrenaline:
o Supports SNS: blood to muscles, increase heartbeat
o Metabolic functions (glucose release/breakdown fats and
proteins)
o Stimulates release ACTH by pituitary (cortisol-concentration)
o Released especially in case of eustress
▪ Cortisol:
o Circadian rhythm (peaks in morning)
o For functioning ANS (by increasing adrenaline + noradrenaline)
o Metabolic functions: same as adrenaline
o Inhibitory effect on glucose uptake by brain, HPA-axis +
immune system
o Involved especially in negative emotions (distress)
▪ Acute effects of cortisol:
o Hippocampus: increase learning & memory
o Thalamus: increase sensitivity to stimuli
o Adrenoreceptors: increase sensitivity
o Immune system: inhibited (increase for very short term)
o Inflammation: decreased
o Glucose and fats: increase production and release




4

École, étude et sujet

Établissement
Cours
Cours

Infos sur le Document

Publié le
8 février 2023
Nombre de pages
31
Écrit en
2020/2021
Type
RESUME

Sujets

€7,69
Accéder à l'intégralité du document:

Garantie de satisfaction à 100%
Disponible immédiatement après paiement
En ligne et en PDF
Tu n'es attaché à rien

Faites connaissance avec le vendeur

Seller avatar
Les scores de réputation sont basés sur le nombre de documents qu'un vendeur a vendus contre paiement ainsi que sur les avis qu'il a reçu pour ces documents. Il y a trois niveaux: Bronze, Argent et Or. Plus la réputation est bonne, plus vous pouvez faire confiance sur la qualité du travail des vendeurs.
milajanssen06 Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen
S'abonner Vous devez être connecté afin de suivre les étudiants ou les cours
Vendu
51
Membre depuis
3 année
Nombre de followers
30
Documents
28
Dernière vente
2 mois de cela

4,1

8 revues

5
4
4
1
3
3
2
0
1
0

Documents populaires

Récemment consulté par vous

Pourquoi les étudiants choisissent Stuvia

Créé par d'autres étudiants, vérifié par les avis

Une qualité sur laquelle compter : rédigé par des étudiants qui ont réussi et évalué par d'autres qui ont utilisé ce document.

Le document ne convient pas ? Choisis un autre document

Aucun souci ! Tu peux sélectionner directement un autre document qui correspond mieux à ce que tu cherches.

Paye comme tu veux, apprends aussitôt

Aucun abonnement, aucun engagement. Paye selon tes habitudes par carte de crédit et télécharge ton document PDF instantanément.

Student with book image

“Acheté, téléchargé et réussi. C'est aussi simple que ça.”

Alisha Student

Foire aux questions