Given the presumed importance of cardiovascular reactivity and the role of anger in the development of hypertension and coronary heart disease, this study is the first to jointly examine three related areas (i.e. gender effects, anger direction preference, and opportunity/no opportunity to aggress following an anger Inducing situation). The present study tested the following hypotheses: a) that cardiovascular reactivity would vary as a function of subjects' gender and direction preference; b) that the rate of cardiovascular recovery would vary as a function of anger direction preference and opportunity/no opportunity to aggress; c) that the subjective feelings of anger after harassment would vary as a function of gender, anger direction pre...
This study examined gender and gender role differences in cardiovascular reactivity and anger experi...
Aggression has been consistently divided up into two types: reactive aggression (RA) and proactive a...
The hypothesis that hostile and nonhostile individuals would differ in both magnitude and duration o...
This study used impedance cardiographic techniques to explore the possible relationships among state...
The present study investigated gender-related differences in cardiovascular reactivity and the role ...
The exact nature of the anger - cardiovascular health relationship and its mechanisms remain obscure...
The purpose of this study was to determine if subjects\u27 preferred modes of anger expression were ...
Evidence concerning the association of anger-proneness with incidence of heart failure is lacking
Hostility and anger have been attributed as psychosocial risk factors for coronary heart disease. He...
Objective: Although considerable evidence implicates hostility in the development of coronary artery...
Objective: The idea that anger may predict ischemic heart disease (IHD) is more than 30 years old. S...
Objective: Anger expression is a dimension of anger that may be strongly related to coronary heart d...
Research suggests that heart rate variability (HRV) is a physiological indicator of the flexibility ...
Objectives: This study examined prospectively (1971–1988) the relationship between anger-coping resp...
Objective: The idea that anger may predict ischemic heart disease (IHD) is more than 30 years old. S...
This study examined gender and gender role differences in cardiovascular reactivity and anger experi...
Aggression has been consistently divided up into two types: reactive aggression (RA) and proactive a...
The hypothesis that hostile and nonhostile individuals would differ in both magnitude and duration o...
This study used impedance cardiographic techniques to explore the possible relationships among state...
The present study investigated gender-related differences in cardiovascular reactivity and the role ...
The exact nature of the anger - cardiovascular health relationship and its mechanisms remain obscure...
The purpose of this study was to determine if subjects\u27 preferred modes of anger expression were ...
Evidence concerning the association of anger-proneness with incidence of heart failure is lacking
Hostility and anger have been attributed as psychosocial risk factors for coronary heart disease. He...
Objective: Although considerable evidence implicates hostility in the development of coronary artery...
Objective: The idea that anger may predict ischemic heart disease (IHD) is more than 30 years old. S...
Objective: Anger expression is a dimension of anger that may be strongly related to coronary heart d...
Research suggests that heart rate variability (HRV) is a physiological indicator of the flexibility ...
Objectives: This study examined prospectively (1971–1988) the relationship between anger-coping resp...
Objective: The idea that anger may predict ischemic heart disease (IHD) is more than 30 years old. S...
This study examined gender and gender role differences in cardiovascular reactivity and anger experi...
Aggression has been consistently divided up into two types: reactive aggression (RA) and proactive a...
The hypothesis that hostile and nonhostile individuals would differ in both magnitude and duration o...