Personality traits modulate emotional and physiological responses to stress

An individual’s susceptibility to psychological and physical disorders associated with chronic stress exposure, for example, cardiovascular and infectious disease, may also be predicted by their reactivity to acute stress. One factor associated with both stress resilience and health outcomes is personality. An understanding of how personality influences responses to acute stress may shed light upon individual differences in susceptibility to chronic stress-linked disease. This study examined the relationships between personality and acute responses to stress in 125 healthy adults, using hierarchical linear regression. We assessed personality traits using the Multidimensional Personality Questionnaire (MPQ-BF), and responses to acute stress (cortisol, heart rate, blood pressure, mood) using a standardized laboratory psychosocial stress task, the Trier Social Stress Test. Individuals with high Negative Emotionality exhibited greater emotional distress and lower blood pressure responses to the Trier Social Stress Test. Individuals with high agentic Positive Emotionality exhibited prolonged heart rate responses to stress, whereas those with high communal Positive Emotionality exhibited smaller cortisol and blood pressure responses. Separate personality traits differentially predicted emotional, cardiovascular, and cortisol responses to a psychosocial stressor in healthy volunteers. Future research investigating the association of personality with chronic stress-related disease may provide further clues to the relationship between acute stress reactivity and susceptibility to disease.

[1]  B. Arnetz,et al.  Psychological predictors of neuroendocrine responses to mental stress. , 1986, Journal of psychosomatic research.

[2]  Mathias Allemand,et al.  Age differences in five personality domains across the life span. , 2008, Developmental psychology.

[3]  Clemens Kirschbaum,et al.  Persistent High Cortisol Responses to Repeated Psychological Stress in a Subpopulation of Healthy Men , 1995, Psychosomatic medicine.

[4]  Ellen A. Skinner,et al.  Coping and the development of regulation , 2009 .

[5]  S. Lyubomirsky,et al.  The Benefits of Frequent Positive Affect: Does Happiness Lead to Success? , 2005, Psychological bulletin.

[6]  Matthew C Morris,et al.  A prospective study of stress autonomy versus stress sensitization in adolescents at varied risk for depression. , 2010, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[7]  J. Weinberg,et al.  Type D personality is related to cardiovascular and neuroendocrine reactivity to acute stress. , 2003, Journal of psychosomatic research.

[8]  L. Williams,et al.  Type D personality and cardiac output in response to stress , 2009, Psychology & health.

[9]  B. Compas,et al.  Coping with stress during childhood and adolescence: problems, progress, and potential in theory and research. , 2001, Psychological bulletin.

[10]  Christopher J Patrick,et al.  Development and validation of a brief form of the Multidimensional Personality Questionnaire. , 2002, Psychological assessment.

[11]  C. Kirschbaum,et al.  Increasing correlations between personality traits and cortisol stress responses obtained by data aggregation , 1997, Psychoneuroendocrinology.

[12]  Johannes Siegrist,et al.  Chronic psychosocial stress at work and risk of depression: evidence from prospective studies , 2008, European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience.

[13]  S. Patterson,et al.  Racial differences in hemodynamic responses to environmental thermal stress among adolescents. , 2000, Circulation.

[14]  G. Koob Stress, Corticotropin‐releasing Factor, and Drug Addiction , 1999, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.

[15]  H. Wit,et al.  Acute Stress Increases Circulating Anandamide and Other N-Acylethanolamines in Healthy Humans , 2012, Neuropsychopharmacology.

[16]  Taiki Takahashi,et al.  Anxiety, reactivity, and social stress-induced cortisol elevation in humans. , 2005, Neuro endocrinology letters.

[17]  D. Gutman,et al.  Persistent central nervous system effects of an adverse early environment: clinical and preclinical studies , 2003, Physiology & Behavior.

[18]  C. Kirschbaum,et al.  The 'Trier Social Stress Test'--a tool for investigating psychobiological stress responses in a laboratory setting. , 1993, Neuropsychobiology.

[19]  O. Luminet,et al.  The moderating impact of emotional intelligence on free cortisol responses to stress , 2007, Psychoneuroendocrinology.

[20]  L. Price,et al.  Sex differences in emotional and physiological responses to the Trier Social Stress Test. , 2008, Journal of behavior therapy and experimental psychiatry.

[21]  M. Hofer Early social relationships: a psychobiologist's view. , 1987, Child development.

[22]  J. Hyde,et al.  Gender Differences in the Cognitive Vulnerability-Stress Model of Depression in the Transition to Adolescence , 2010, Cognitive Therapy and Research.

[23]  S. Gardini,et al.  Neuroendocrine responses to experimentally-induced psychological stress in healthy humans , 2001, Psychoneuroendocrinology.

[24]  C. Nemeroff The Role of Corticotropin-Releasing Factor in the Pathogenesis of Major Depression , 1988, Pharmacopsychiatry.

[25]  Douglas G. Altman,et al.  Practical statistics for medical research , 1990 .

[26]  D. Derryberry,et al.  Temperament and coping: Advantages of an individual differences perspective , 2003, Development and Psychopathology.

[27]  D. Nutt,et al.  Effect of single and repeated electroconvulsive shock on the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis and plasma catecholamines in rats , 2004, Psychopharmacology.

[28]  David R. Williams,et al.  Blood Pressure Reactivity to Psychological Stress Predicts Hypertension in the CARDIA Study , 2004, Circulation.

[29]  C. Kirschbaum,et al.  Two formulas for computation of the area under the curve represent measures of total hormone concentration versus time-dependent change , 2003, Psychoneuroendocrinology.

[30]  N. Bolger,et al.  A framework for studying personality in the stress process. , 1995, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[31]  N. Bolger,et al.  Coping as a personality process: a prospective study. , 1990, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[32]  B. McEwen Protective and damaging effects of stress mediators. , 1998, The New England journal of medicine.

[33]  Stacey B. Scott,et al.  Age differences in emotional responses to daily stress: the role of timing, severity, and global perceived stress. , 2013, Psychology and aging.

[34]  C. Kirschbaum,et al.  Consistent sex differences in cortisol responses to psychological stress. , 1992, Psychosomatic medicine.

[35]  C. Carter-Snell,et al.  Stress disorders and gender: implications for theory and research. , 2003, The Canadian journal of nursing research = Revue canadienne de recherche en sciences infirmieres.

[36]  A Steptoe,et al.  Cardiovascular Risk and Responsivity to Mental Stress: The Influence of Age, Gender and Risk Factors , 1996, Journal of cardiovascular risk.

[37]  N. Bohnen,et al.  Coping style, trait anxiety and cortisol reactivity during mental stress. , 1991, Journal of psychosomatic research.

[38]  B. Kudielka,et al.  Impact of gender, menstrual cycle phase, and oral contraceptives on the activity of the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis. , 1999, Psychosomatic medicine.

[39]  Jerry Suls,et al.  Anger, anxiety, and depression as risk factors for cardiovascular disease: the problems and implications of overlapping affective dispositions. , 2005, Psychological bulletin.

[40]  Angela L. Lee,et al.  Stress and depression: possible links to neuron death in the hippocampus. , 2002, Bipolar disorders.

[41]  T. Bale,et al.  Stress sensitivity and the development of affective disorders , 2006, Hormones and Behavior.

[42]  R. Dahl,et al.  Resilience among children and adolescents at risk for depression: Mediation and moderation across social and neurobiological contexts , 2007, Development and Psychopathology.

[43]  C. Kirschbaum,et al.  Neuroendocrine and psychometric evaluation of a placebo version of the ‘Trier Social Stress Test’ , 2009, Psychoneuroendocrinology.

[44]  A. Vincent,et al.  Use of a resting control day in measuring the cortisol response to mental stress: Diurnal patterns, time of day, and gender effects , 2010, Psychoneuroendocrinology.

[45]  Clemens Kirschbaum,et al.  Cortisol responses to psychological stress and correlations with personality traits , 1992 .

[46]  D. Segal,et al.  Dissociation between in vivo hippocampal norepinephrine response and behavioral/neuroendocrine responses to noise stress in rats , 1992, Brain Research.

[47]  B. Kudielka,et al.  No Evidence for a Close Relationship between Personality Traits and Circadian Cortisol Rhythm or a Single Cortisol Stress Response , 1999, Psychological reports.

[48]  K. Raichle,et al.  Patient personality and mortality: a 4-year prospective examination of chronic renal insufficiency. , 2002, Health psychology : official journal of the Division of Health Psychology, American Psychological Association.

[49]  B. Alpert,et al.  Ethnicity, pressor reactivity, and children's blood pressure. Five years of observations. , 1992, Hypertension.

[50]  M. Meaney,et al.  Maternal care, gene expression, and the transmission of individual differences in stress reactivity across generations. , 2001, Annual review of neuroscience.

[51]  N. Schneiderman,et al.  Myocardial and peripheral vascular responses to behavioral challenges and their stability in black and white Americans. , 1992, Psychophysiology.

[52]  S. Kjeldsen,et al.  Sympathoadrenal Stress Reactivity Is a Predictor of Future Blood Pressure: An 18-Year Follow-Up Study , 2008, Hypertension.

[53]  Cardiovascular and neuroendocrine responses to extended laboratory challenge. , 1993, Psychosomatic medicine.

[54]  E. Diener,et al.  Extraversion and neuroticism as predictors of objective life events: a longitudinal analysis. , 1993, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[55]  Leiv Sandvik,et al.  Long-Term Stability of Cardiovascular and Catecholamine Responses to Stress Tests: An 18-Year Follow-Up Study , 2010, Hypertension.

[56]  H. Berkhof,et al.  Individual differences in cortisol responses to a laboratory speech task and their relationship to responses to stressful daily events , 1996, Biological Psychology.

[57]  E. Forbes Where's the Fun in That? Broadening the Focus on Reward Function in Depression , 2009, Biological Psychiatry.

[58]  L. Borrell,et al.  Social disparities in periodontitis among United States adults 1999-2004. , 2008, Community dentistry and oral epidemiology.

[59]  M. Lorr,et al.  Profile of mood states , 1971 .

[60]  A. Steptoe,et al.  Greater Cardiovascular Responses to Laboratory Mental Stress Are Associated With Poor Subsequent Cardiovascular Risk Status: A Meta-Analysis of Prospective Evidence , 2010, Hypertension.

[61]  U. Ehlert,et al.  Perfectionism and the Cortisol Response to Psychosocial Stress in Men , 2007, Psychosomatic medicine.

[62]  Yong Peng Why,et al.  The effects of neuroticism and extraversion on cardiovascular reactivity during a mental and an emotional stress task. , 2009, International journal of psychophysiology : official journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology.

[63]  Mark Hamer,et al.  Chronic psychosocial factors and acute physiological responses to laboratory-induced stress in healthy populations: a quantitative review of 30 years of investigations. , 2008, Psychological bulletin.

[64]  A. Salvador,et al.  Acute stress impairs recall after interference in older people, but not in young people , 2014, Hormones and Behavior.

[65]  Howard B. Kaplan,et al.  Psychosocial Stress: Perspectives on Structure, Theory, Life-Course, and Methods , 1997 .

[66]  W. Lovallo,et al.  Hemodynamic characteristics of young men at risk for hypertension at rest and during laboratory stressors. , 1992, Health psychology : official journal of the Division of Health Psychology, American Psychological Association.

[67]  Gary S Wand,et al.  Relationship between Cortisol Responses to Stress and Personality , 2006, Neuropsychopharmacology.

[68]  M. Rothbart,et al.  The influence of temperament on the development of coping: the role of maturation and experience. , 2009, New directions for child and adolescent development.

[69]  L. Price,et al.  Temperament and response to the Trier Social Stress Test , 2007, Acta psychiatrica Scandinavica.

[70]  J. Lumpkin,et al.  Personality characteristics and salespeople’s choice of coping strategies , 1995 .

[71]  Janet B W Williams,et al.  Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders , 2013 .

[72]  H. Lackner,et al.  Delayed psychophysiological recovery after self-concept-inconsistent negative performance feedback. , 2011, International journal of psychophysiology : official journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology.

[73]  D. Hellhammer,et al.  A Psychobiological Perspective on Genetic Determinants of Hypothalamus‐Pituitary‐Adrenal Axis Activity , 2004, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.

[74]  Heejung S. Kim Culture and the cognitive and neuroendocrine responses to speech. , 2008, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[75]  S. Dickerson,et al.  Acute stressors and cortisol responses: a theoretical integration and synthesis of laboratory research. , 2004, Psychological bulletin.

[76]  C. Lau,et al.  Prevalence, Awareness, Treatment, and Control of Hypertension Among United States Adults 1999–2004 , 2007, Hypertension.

[77]  W. Greenough,et al.  Experience and brain development. , 1987, Child development.

[78]  H. de Wit,et al.  Cardiovascular, hormonal, and emotional responses to the TSST in relation to sex and menstrual cycle phase. , 2010, Psychophysiology.

[79]  Andrew P. Smith,et al.  Psychological stress and susceptibility to the common cold. , 1991, The New England journal of medicine.

[80]  D. Seals,et al.  Collateral damage: cardiovascular consequences of chronic sympathetic activation with human aging. , 2004, American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology.

[81]  M. Gunnar,et al.  Adrenocortical responses to the strange situation in infants with disorganized/disoriented attachment relationships. , 1995, Child development.

[82]  M. Berger,et al.  Cortisol response to various stressful situations: relationship to personality variables and coping styles. , 1988, Neuropsychobiology.

[83]  Clemens Kirschbaum,et al.  Dissociation Between Reactivity of the Hypothalamus-Pituitary-Adrenal Axis and the Sympathetic-Adrenal-Medullary System to Repeated Psychosocial Stress , 2003, Psychosomatic medicine.

[84]  Ulrike Ehlert,et al.  The level of physical activity affects adrenal and cardiovascular reactivity to psychosocial stress , 2009, Psychoneuroendocrinology.

[85]  H. Wit,et al.  Hormonal, cardiovascular, and subjective responses to acute stress in smokers , 2009, Psychopharmacology.

[86]  Tamera R. Schneider,et al.  The influence of neuroticism, extraversion and openness on stress responses. , 2012, Stress and health : journal of the International Society for the Investigation of Stress.

[87]  E. Walker,et al.  Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders , 2013 .

[88]  J. Gray,et al.  The psychophysiological basis of introversion-extraversion. , 1970, Behaviour research and therapy.

[89]  Justin J MacKenzie,et al.  Personality and risk of physical illness. , 2006, Annual review of clinical psychology.

[90]  T. Bale Sensitivity to stress: Dysregulation of CRF pathways and disease development , 2005, Hormones and Behavior.

[91]  N. Schneiderman,et al.  Cardiovascular Reactivity and Development of Preclinical and Clinical Disease States , 2003, Psychosomatic medicine.

[92]  J. Andreassi,et al.  Cardiovascular reactivity during public speaking as a function of personality variables. , 2000, International journal of psychophysiology : official journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology.

[93]  Dawn K. Wilson,et al.  Race differences in cardiovascular and cortisol responses to an interpersonal challenge in women who are family caregivers. , 2005, Ethnicity & disease.

[94]  H. de Wit,et al.  Stress-induced changes in mood and cortisol release predict mood effects of amphetamine. , 2010, Drug and alcohol dependence.

[95]  Racial differences in stress-induced cardiovascular reactivity and hypertension: current status and substantive issues. , 1989, Psychological bulletin.