Authors
Sheldon Cohen, Peter J Gianaros, Stephen B Manuck
Publication date
2016/7
Source
Perspectives on Psychological Science
Volume
11
Issue
4
Pages
456-463
Publisher
Sage Publications
Description
In this article, we argued that the term stress has served as a valuable heuristic, helping researchers to integrate traditions that illuminate different stages of the process linking stressful life events to disease. We provided a short history of three traditions in the study of stress: the epidemiological, psychological, and biological. The epidemiological tradition focuses on defining which circumstances and experiences are deemed stressful on the basis of consensual agreement that they constitute threats to social or physical well-being. The psychological tradition focuses on individuals’ perceptions of the stress presented by life events on the basis of their appraisals of the threats posed and the availability of effective coping resources. The biological tradition focuses on brain-based perturbations of physiological systems that are otherwise essential for normal homeostatic regulation and metabolic control. The foci of these …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
S Cohen, PJ Gianaros, SB Manuck - Perspectives on Psychological Science, 2016