Cardiovascular Reactivity of Singaporean Male Police Officers as a Function of Task, Ethnicity and Hostility
December 13, 2016
‘Cardiovascular Reactivity of Singaporean Male Police Officers as a Function of Task, Ethnicity and Hostility’ authored by Dr Y P Why, former faculty at the FASS Department of Psychology, along with G.D. Bishop, H.C. Enkelmann, M.W.E. Tong, S.M. Diong, M. Khader and J. Ang, was published in the International Journal of Psychophysiology (2003).
This research examined hemodynamic processes in cardiovascular reactivity (CVR) as a function of task, ethnicity, and trait hostility. 114 male patrol officers from the Singapore Police Force participated in this experimental study. Trait hostility was measured using the interpersonal hostility assessment technique to derive a hostile behavior index (HBI). Heart rate, blood pressure and hemodynamic measures were taken while participants performed three tasks: mental arithmetic, number reading and anger recall (AR). AR elicited the greatest blood pressure, vascular and cardiac output reactivity. HBI scores were positively related to systolic blood pressure reactivity during AR for Malays unlike Indians and Chinese. Across the three tasks Indians with high HBI scores appeared to be cardiac reactors whereas the reactivity patterns for Malays and Chinese were undifferentiated. Self-report of negative mood was not related to CVR. These results are consistent with the higher rates of coronary heart disease deaths among Indians as well as the higher rates of hypertension among Malays in Singapore.
Read the full article here.