TY - JOUR
T1 - The fear-factor stress test
T2 - An ethical, non-invasive laboratory method that produces consistent and sustained cortisol responding in men and women
AU - Du Plooy, Christopher
AU - Thomas, Kevin G.F.
AU - Henry, Michelle
AU - Human, Robyn
AU - Jacobs, W. Jake
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgments This research was supported in part by the South African National Research Foundation (NRF). We thank Marc Dey for his help in formulating the Fear-Factor Stress Test, and Katharine James for her critique of the manuscript.
PY - 2014/6
Y1 - 2014/6
N2 - We describe a method to administer a controlled, effective stressor to humans in the laboratory. The method combines the Trier Social Stress Test (TSST) and the Cold Pressor Test into a single, believable procedure called the Fear-Factor Stress Test (FFST). In the procedure, participants imagine auditioning for the reality television show Fear Factor. They stand before a video recorder and a panel of judges while (a) delivering a motivational speech, (b) performing a verbal arithmetic task, and (c) placing one hand into a bucket of ice water for up to 2 min. We measured subjective anxiety, heart rate, and salivary cortisol in three groups of young adults (n=30 each, equal numbers of men and women): FFST, TSST, and Control (a placebo version of the FFST). Although the FFST and TSST groups were not distinguishable at the cortisol measure taken 5 min post-manipulation, at 35 min postmanipulation average cortisol levels in the TSST group had returned to baseline, whereas those in the FFST group continued to rise. The proportion of individual cortisol responders (≥ 2 nmol/l increase over baseline) in the TSST and FFST groups did not differ at the 5-min measure, but at the 35-min measure the FFST group contained significantly more responders. The findings indicate that the FFST induces a more robust and sustained cortisol response (which we assume is a marker of an HPA-axis response) than the TSST, and that it does so without increasing participant discomfort or incurring appreciably greater resource and time costs.
AB - We describe a method to administer a controlled, effective stressor to humans in the laboratory. The method combines the Trier Social Stress Test (TSST) and the Cold Pressor Test into a single, believable procedure called the Fear-Factor Stress Test (FFST). In the procedure, participants imagine auditioning for the reality television show Fear Factor. They stand before a video recorder and a panel of judges while (a) delivering a motivational speech, (b) performing a verbal arithmetic task, and (c) placing one hand into a bucket of ice water for up to 2 min. We measured subjective anxiety, heart rate, and salivary cortisol in three groups of young adults (n=30 each, equal numbers of men and women): FFST, TSST, and Control (a placebo version of the FFST). Although the FFST and TSST groups were not distinguishable at the cortisol measure taken 5 min post-manipulation, at 35 min postmanipulation average cortisol levels in the TSST group had returned to baseline, whereas those in the FFST group continued to rise. The proportion of individual cortisol responders (≥ 2 nmol/l increase over baseline) in the TSST and FFST groups did not differ at the 5-min measure, but at the 35-min measure the FFST group contained significantly more responders. The findings indicate that the FFST induces a more robust and sustained cortisol response (which we assume is a marker of an HPA-axis response) than the TSST, and that it does so without increasing participant discomfort or incurring appreciably greater resource and time costs.
KW - Cold Pressor Test (CPT)
KW - Cortisol
KW - Hypothalamic-pituitary adrenal (HPA) axis
KW - Physiological stressor
KW - Psychosocial stressor
KW - Trier Social Stress Test (TSST)
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U2 - 10.1007/s11011-014-9484-9
DO - 10.1007/s11011-014-9484-9
M3 - Article
C2 - 24435939
AN - SCOPUS:84901585730
SN - 0885-7490
VL - 29
SP - 385
EP - 394
JO - Metabolic Brain Disease
JF - Metabolic Brain Disease
IS - 2
ER -