Psychosocial Differences, Supplementary File

Psychosocial Differences, Supplementary File

1

Psychosocial Differences, Supplementary File

Supplementary table. Excluded papers.

No. / References / Reason for exclusion
1 / Adler, N.E., Epel, E.S., Castellazzo, G., & Ickovics, J.R. (2000). Relationship of subjective and objective social status with psychological and physiological functioning: preliminary data in healthy white women. Health Psychology, 19, 586-592. / No relevant predictor
2 / Ahrens, T., Deuschle, M., Krumm, B., van der Pompe, G., den Boer, J.A., & Lederbogen, F. (2008). Pituitary-adrenal and sympathetic nervous system responses to stress in women remitted from recurrent major depression. Psychosomatic Medicine, doi:10.1097/PSY.0b013e31816b1aaa. / No relevant sample
3 / Albus, M., Engel R.R., Müller, F., Zander, K-J., & Ackenheil, M. (1982) Experimental stress situations and the state of autonomic arousal in schizophrenic and dpressive patients. International Pharmacopsychiatry, 17, 129-135. / No relevant outcome
4 / Alexander, J.K., Hillier, A., Smith, R.M., Tivarus, M.E., & Beversdorf, D.Q. (2007). Beta-adrenergic modulation of cognitive flexibility during stress. Jouranl of Cognitive Neuroscience, 19, 468-478. / No relevant predictor
5 / Allred, K.D. & Smith, T.W. (1991). Social cognition in cynical hostility. Cognitive Therapy and Research, 15, 399-412. / No relevant predictor
6 / Anderson, N.B., Lane, J.D., Monou, H., Williams, R.B., & Houseworth, S.J. (1988). Racial differences in cardiovascular reactivity to mental arithmetic. International Journal of Psychophysiology, 6, 161-164. / No relevant predictor
7 / Anthony, J.L. & O’Brien, W.H. (1999). An evaluation of the impact of social support manipulations on cardiovascular reactivity to laboratory stressors. Behavioral Medicine, 25, 78-87. / No relevant predictor
8 / Aschbacher, K., Mills, P.J., von Känel, R., Hong, S., Mausbach, B.T., Roepke, S.K., Dimsdale, J.E., Patterson, T.L., Ziegler, M.G., Ancoli-Israel, S., & Grant, I. (2008). Effect of depressive and anxious symptoms on norepinephrine and platelet P-selectin respones to acute psychological stress among elderly caregivers. Brain, Bheavior, and Immunity, 22, 493-502. / No relevant sample
9 / Aschbacher, K., Patterson, T.L., von Känel, R., Dimsdale, J.E., Mills, P.J., Adler, K.A., Ancoli-Israel, S., & Grant, I. (2005). Coping processes and hemostatic reactivity to acute stress in dementia caregivers. Psychosomatic Medicine, 67, 964-971. / No relevant outcome
10 / Barnes, V.A., Treiber, F.A., Musante, L., Turner, J.R., Davis, H., & Strong, W.B. (2000). Ethnicity and socioeconomic status: impact on cardiovascular activity at rest and during stress in youth with a family history of hypertenstion. Ethnicity Disease, 10, 4-16. / No relevant predictor
11 / Bertolotti, G., Sanavio, E., Angelino, E., Seghizzi, P., Vidotto, G., Bettinardi, O., & Zotti, A.M. (1995). Psychophysiological reactivity, depression, neuroticism and type A behaviour: an interactive effect? Stress Medicine, 11, 123-129. / No relevant predictor
12 / Blanchard, E.B., Hickling, E.J., Buckley, T.C., Taylor, A.E., Vollmer, A., & Loos, W.R. (1996). Psychophysiology of posttraumatic stress disorder related to motor vehicle accidents: replication and extension. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 64, 742-751. / No relevant sample
13 / Blair, C. & Peters, R. (2003). Physiological and neurocognitive correlates of adaptive behavior in preschool among children in head start. Developmental Neuropsycholology, 24, 479-497. / No relevant predictor
14 / Bohnen, N., Nicolson, N., Sulon, J., & Jolles, J. (1991). Coping style, trait anxiety and cortisol reactivity during mental stress. Journal of Psychosomatic Research, 35, 141-147. / No relevant stressor
15 / Borkovec, T.D., Lyonfields, J.D., Wiser, S.L., & Deihl, L. (1993). The role of worrisome thinking in the suppression of cardiovascular response to phobic imagery. Behavioral Research Therapy, 31, 321-324. / No relevant predictor
16 / Borkovec, T.D. & Hu, S. (1990). The effect of worry on cardiovascular response to phobic imagery. Behavioral Research Therapy, 28, 69-73. / No relevant predictor
17 / Bower, J.E., Ganz, P.A., & Aziz, N. (2005). Altered cortisol response to psychologic stress in breast cancer survivors with persistent fatigue. Psychosomatic Medicine, 67, 277-280. / No relevant sample
18 / Boyce, W.T, & Chesterman, E. (1990). Life events, social support, and cardiovascular reactivity in adolescence. Journal of Developmental Behavioral Pediatrics, 11, 105-111. / No relevant stressor
19 / Breier, A. (1989). Experimental approaches to human stress research: assessment of neurobiological mechanisms of stress in volunteers and psychiatric patients. Biological Psychiatry, 26, 438-462. / No relevant sample
20 / Broadwell, S.D. & Light, K.C. (1999). Family support and cardiovascular responses in married couples during conflict and other interactions. International Journal of Behavioral Medicine, 6, 40-63. / No relevant outcome
21 / Brosschot, J.F., Benshop, R.J., Godaert, G.L.R., Olff, M., Smet, M.D., Heijnen, C.J., & Ballieux, R.E. (1994) Influence of life stress on immunological reactivity to mild psychological stress. Psychosomatic Medicine, 56, 216-224. / No relevant outcome
22 / Brown, P.C. & Smith, T.W. (1992). Social influence, marriage, and the heart: cardiovascular consequences of interpersonal control in husbands and wives. Health Psychology, 11, 88-96. / No relevant predictor
23 / Burns, J.W., Wiegner, S., Derleth, M., Kiselica, K., & Pawl, R. (1997). Linking symptom-specific physiological reactivity to pain severity in chronic low back pain patients: a test of mediation and moderation models. Health Psychology, 16, 319-326. / No relevant sample
24 / Burns, J.W., Hutt, J., & Weidner, G. (1993). Effects of demand and decision latitude on cardiovascular reactivity among coronary-prone women and men. Behavioral Medicine, 19, 122-128. / No relevant predictor
25 / Butki, B.D., Rudolph, D.L., Jacobsen, H. (2001). Self-efficacy, state anxiety, and cortisol responses to treadmill running. Perceptual and Motor Skills, 92, 1129-1138. / No relevant stressor
26 / Carrillo, E., Moya-Albiol, L., González-Bono, E., Salvador, A., Ricarte, J., & Gómez-Amor, J. (2001). Gender differences in cardiovascular and electrodermal responses to public speaking task: the role of anziety and mood states. Interantional Journal of Psychophysiology, 42, 253-264. / No relevant outcome
27 / Carroll, D., Harrison, L.K., Johnston, D.W., Ford, G., Hunt, K., Der, G., & West, P. (2000). Cardiovascular reactions to psychological stress: the influence of demographic variables. Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 54, 876-877. / No relevant predictor
28 / Chen, E. & Matthews, K.A. (2001). Cognitive appraisal biases: an approach to understanding the relation between socioeconomic status and cardiovascular reactivity in children. Annals of Behavioral Medicine, 23, 101-111. / No relevant stressor
29 / Christenfeld, N., Gerin, W., Linden, W., Sanders, M., Mathur, J., Deich, J., & Pickering, T.G. (1997). Social support effects on cardiovascular reactivity: Is a stranger as effective as a friend? Psychomatic Medicine, 59, 388-398. / No relevant predictor
30 / Clark, L., Iversen, S.D., & Goodwin, G.M. (2001). The influence of positive and negative mood states on risk taking, verbal fluency, and salivary cortisol. Journal of Affective Disorders, 63, 179-187. / No relevant predictor
31 / Cohen, S., Hamrick, N., Rodriguez M.S., Feldman, P.J., Rabin, B.S., Manuck, S.B. (2000). The stability of and intercorrelations among cardiovascular, immune, endocrine, and psychological reactivity. Annals, of Behavioral Medicine, 22, 171-179. / No relevant predictor
32 / Cohen, F., Kearney, K.A., Zegans, L.S., Kemeny, M.E., Neuhaus, J.M., & Stites, D.P. (1999). Differential immune system changes with acute and persistent stress for optimists vs pessimists. Brain, Behavior, and Immunity, 13, 155-174. / No relevant outcome
33 / Craig, F.W., Lynch, J.J., & Quartner, J.L. (2000). The perception of available social support is related to reduced cardiovascular reactivity in phase II cardiac rehavilitation patients. Integrative Physiological and Behavioral Science, 35, 272-283. / No relevant sample
34 / Creswell, J.D., Welch, W.T., Taylor, S.E., Sherman, D.K., Gruenewald, T.L., & Mann, T. (2005). Affirmation of personal values buffers neuroendocrine and psychological stress responses. Psychological Science, 16, 846-851. / No relevant predictor
35 / Croes, S., Merz, P., & Netter, P. (1993). Cortisol reaction in success and failure condtion in endogenous depressed patients and controls. Psychoneuroendocrinology, 18, 23-35. / No relevant sample
36 / Derakshan, N. & Eysenck, M.W. (1997). Interpretive biases for one’s own behavior and physiology inhigh-trait-anxious individuals and repressors. ? Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 73, 816-825. / No relevant outcome
37 / Davidson, R.J., Marshall, J.R., Tomarken, A.J. & Henriques, J.B. (2000). While a phobic waits: regional brain electrical and autonomic activity in social phobics during anticipation of public speaking. Biological Psychiatry, 47, 85-95. / No relevant sample
38 / Dembroski, T.M. & MacDougall, J.M., Lushene, R. (1979). Interpersonal interaction and cardiovascular response in type A subjects and coronary patients. Journal of Human Stress, 5, 28-36. / No relevant sample
39 / Diamond, E.L. & Carver, C.S. (1980). Sensory processing, cardiocascular reacitivy, and the type A coronary-prone behavior pattern. Biological Psychology, 10, 265-275. / No relevant outcome
40 / Ditzen, B., Neumann, I.D., Bodenmann, G., von Dawans, B., Turner, R.A., Ehlert, U., & Heinrichs, M. (2007). Effects of different kinds of couple interaction on cortisol and heart rate responses to stress in women. Psychoneuroendocrinology, 32, 565-574. / No relevant predictor
41 / Dopp, J. (2000). Increased natural killer-cell mobilization and cytotoxicity during marital conflict. Brain, Behavior, and Immunity, 14, 10-26. / No relevant predictor
42 / Earle, T.L., Linden, W., & Weinberg, J. (1999). Differential effects of harassment on cardiovascular and salivary cortisol stress reactivity and recovery in women and men. Journal of Psychosomic Research, 46, 125-141. / No relevant predictor
43 / Egloff, B., Schmukle, S.C., Burns, L.R., & Schwerdtfeger, A. (2006). Spontaneous emotion regulation during evaluated speaking tasks: associations with negative affect, anxiety expression, memory, and physiological responding. Emotion, 6, 356-366. / No relevant predictor
44 / Engebretson, T.O., Matthews, K.A., & Scheier, M.F. (1989). Relations between anger expression and cardiovascular reactivity: reconciling inconsistent findings through a matching hypothesis. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 57, 513-521. / No relevant predictor
45 / Fleming, I., Baum, A., Davidson, L.M., Rectanus, E., & McArdle, S. (1987). Chronic stress as a factor in physiologic reactivity to challenge. Health Psychology, 6, 221-237. / No relevant predictor
46 / Floyd, K., Mikkelson, A.C., Tafoya, M.A., Farinelli, L., Valley, A.G.L., Judd, J., Davis, K.L., Haynes, M.T., & Wilson, J. (2007). Human affection exchange: XIV. Relational affection predicts resting heart rate and free cortisol secretion during acute stress. Behavioral Medicine, 32, 151-156. / No relevant stressor
47 / Fontana, A.M., Diegnan, T., Villeneuve, A., & Lepore, S.J. (1999). Nonevaluative social support reduces cardiovascular reactivity in young women during acutely stressful performance situations. Journal of Behavioral Medicine, 22, 75-91. / No relevant predictor
48 / Freadrikson, M. & Georgiades, A. (1992). Personality dimensions and classical conditioning of autonomic nervous system reactions. Personality and Individual Differences, 13, 1013-1020. / No relevant stressor
49 / Friedman, B.H. & Thayer, J.F. (1998). Anxiety and autonomic flexibility: a cardiovascular approach. Biological Psychology, 49, 303-323. / No relevant stressor
50 / Fuller, B.F. (1992). The effects of stress-anxiety and coping styles on heart rate variability. Interanational Journal of Psychophysiology, 12, 81-86. / No relevant outcome
51 / Furlan, P.M., DeMartinis, N., Schweizer, E., Rickels, K., & Lucki, I. (2001). Abnormal salivary cortisol levels in social phobic patients in response to acute psychological but not physical stress. Biological Psychiatry, 50, 254-259 / No relevant outcome
52 / Gallo, L.C., Smith, T.W., & Kircher, J.C. (2000). Cardiovascular and electrodermal responses to support and provocation: interpersonal methods in the study of psychophysiological reactivity. Psychophysiology, 37, 289-301. / No relevant predictor
53 / Garcia-Leal, C., Parente, A.C.B.V., Del-Ben, C.M., Guimarães, F.S., Moreira, C.A., Elias, L.L.K., & Graeff, F.G. (2005). Anxiety and salivary cortisol in symptomatic and nonsymptomatic panic patients and healthy volunteers performing public speaking. Psychiatry Research, 133, 239-252. / No relevant sample
54 / Gerin, W., Litt, M.D., Deich, J., & Pickering, T. (1996). Self-efficacy as a component of active coping: effects on cardiovascular reactivity. Journal of Psychosomatic Research, 40, 485-493. / No relevant predictor
55 / Gerin, W., Milner, D., Chawla, S., & Pickering, T.G. (1995). Social support as a moderator of cardiovascular reactivity in women: a test of the direct effects and buffering hypotheses. Psychosomatic Medicine, 57, 16-22. / No relevant predictor
56 / Gerin, W., Litt, M.D., Deich, J., & Pickering, T.G. (1995). Self-efficacy as a modulator of perceived control effects on cardiovascular reactivity: is enhanced control always beneficial? Psychosomatic Medicine, 57, 390-397. / No relevant predictor
57 / Gerin, W., Pieper, C., Levy, R., & Pickering, T.G. (1992). Social support in social interaction: a moderator of cardiovascular reactivity. Psychosomatic Medicine, 54, 324-336. / No relevant predictor
58 / Giese-Davis, J., Wilhelm, F.H., Conrad, A., Abercrombie, H.C., Sephton, S., Yutsis, M., Taylor, B., Kraemer, C., & Spiegel, D. (2006). Depression and stress reactivity in metastatic breast cancer. Psychosomatic Medicine, 68, 675-683. / No relevant sample
59 / Girdler, S.S., Hinderliter, A.L., Brownley, K.A., Turner, J.R., Sherwood, A., & Light, K.C. (1996). The ability of active versus passive coping tasks to predict future blood pressure levels in normotensive men and women. International Journal of Behavioral Medicine, 3, 233-250. / No relevant predictor
60 / Glass, D.C., Lake, C.R., Contrada, R.J., Kehoe, K., & Erlanger, L.R. (1983). Stability of individual differences in physiological responses to stress. Health Psychology, 2, 317-341. / No relevant predictor
61 / Glynn, L.M., Christenfeld, N., & Gerin, W. (1999). Gender, social support, and cardiovascular responses to stress. Psychosomatic Medicine 61: 234-242. / No relevant predictor
62 / Goldstein, H.S., Edelberg, R., Meier, C.F., & Davis, L. (1988). Relationship of resting blood pressure and heart rate to experienced anger and expressed anger. Psychosomatic Medicine, 50, 321-329. / No relevant outcome
63 / Gotthardt, U. Schweiger, U., Fahrengerg, J., Lauer, C.J., Holsboer, F., & Heuser, I. (1995). Cortisol, ACTH, and cardiocascular response to a cognitive challenge paradigm in aging and depression. American Journal of Phsysiology, 37, R865-R873. / No relevant sample
64 / Grossi, G., Åhs, A., & Lundberg, U. (1998). Psychological correlates of salivary cortisol secretion among unemployed men and women. Integrative Phsiological and Behavioral Science, 33, 249-263. / No relevant stressor
65 / Gramer, M. & Saria, K. (2007). Effects of social anxiety and evaluative threat on cardiovascular responses to active performance situations. Biological Psychology, 74, 67-74. / No relevant predictor
66 / Grossman, P., Wilhelm, F.H., Kawachi, I., & Sparrow, D. (2001). Gender differences in psychophysiological responses to speech stress among older social phobics: congruence and incongruence between self-evaluative and cardiovascular reactions. Psychosomatic Medicine, 63, 765-777. / No relevant outcome
67 / Gruenewald, T.L., Kemeny, M.E., & Aziz, N. (2006). Subjective social status moderates cortisol responses to social thereat. Brain, Behavior, and Immunity, 20, 410-419. / No relevant predictor
68 / Gruenewald, T.L., Kemeny, M.E., Aziz, N., & Fahey, J.L. (2004). Acute threat to the social self: shame, social self-esteem, and cortisol activity. Psychosomatic Medicine, 66, 915-924. / No relevant predictor
69 / Gudjonsso, G.H. (1981). Self-reported emotional disturbance and its relation to electrodermal reactivity, defensiviness and trait anxiety. Personality and Individual Differences, 2, 47-52. / No relevant predictor
70 / Guinjoan, S.M., Bernobó, J.L., & Cardinali, D.P. (1995). Cardiocascular tests of autonomic function and sympathetic skin responses in patients with major depression. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry, 58, 299-302. / No relevant sample
71 / Halligan, S.L., Michael, T., Wilhelm, F.H., Clark, D.M., & Ehlers, A. (2006). Reduced heart rate responding to trauma reliving in trauma survivors with PTSD: correlates and consequences. Journal of Traumatic Stress, 19, 721-734. / No relevant sample
72 / Heffner, K.L., Ginsburg, G.P., & Hartley, T.R. (2002). Appraisals and impression management opportunities: person and situation influences on cardiovascular reactivity. Interantional Journal of Psychophysiology, 44, 165-175. / No relevant predictor
73 / Heimberg, R.G., Hope, D.A., Dodge, C.S., & Becker, R.E. (1990). DSM-III-R sybtypes of social phobia. Combarison of generalized social phobics and public speaking phobics. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 178, 172-179. / No relevant predictor
74 / Heinrichs, M., Baumgartner, T., Kirschbaum, C., & Ehlert, U. (2003). Social support and oxytocin interact to suppress cortisol and subjective responses to psychosocial stress. Biological Psychiatry, 54, 1389-1398. / No relevant predictor
75 / Hoehn-Saric, R., McLeod, D.R., & Zimmerli, W.D. (1989). Somatic manisfestations in women with generalized anxiety disorder. Archives of General Psychiatry, 46, 1113-1119. / No relevant sample
76 / Hofmann, S.G., Newman, M.G., Ehlers, A., & Roth, W.T. (1995). Psychophysiological differences between subgroups of social phobia. Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 104, 224-231. / No relevant sample
77 / Hu, S. & Romans-Kroll, J-M. (1995). Effects of positive attitude toward giving a speech on cardiovascular and subjective fear responses during speech in anxious subjects. Perceptual and Motor Skills, 81, 609-610. / No relevant predictor
78 / Hu, S., Bostow, T.R., Lipman, D.A., Bell, S.K., & Klein, S. (1992). Positive thinking reduces heart rate and fear responses to speech-phobic imagery. Perceptual and Motor Skills, 75, 1067-1073. / No relevant predictor
79 / Jackson, R.W., Treiber, F.A., Turner, J.R., Davis, H., & Strong, W.B. (1999). Effects of race, sex, and socioeconomic status upon cardiovascular stress responsivity and and recovery in youth. International Journal of Psychophysiology, 31, 111-119. / No relevant predictor
80 / Jamner, L.D., Shapiro, D., Goldstein, I.B., & Rozanne, H. (1991). Ambulatory blood pressure and heart rate in paramedics: effects of cynical hostility and defensiveness. Psychosomatic Medicine, 53, 393-406. / No relevant outcome
81 / Johnson, E.H. (1989). Cardiovascular reactivity, emotional factors, and home blood pressures in black males with and without a parental history of hypertension. Psychomatic Medicine, 51, 390-403. / No relevant predictor
82 / Jones, K.V., Copolov, D.L., & Outch, K.H. (1986). Type A, test performance and salivary cortisol. Journal of Psychosomatic Research, 30, 699-707. / No relevant outcome
83 / Kamarck, T.W., Annunziato, B., & Amatequ, L.M. (1995). Affiliation moderates the effects of social thereat on stress-related cardiovascular responses: boundary conditions for a laboratory model of social support. Psychosomatic Medicine, 57, 183-194. / No relevant predictor
84 / Kamarck, T.W., Manuck, S.B., & Jennings, J.R. (1990). Social support reduces cardiovascular reactivity to psychological challenge: a laboratory model. Psychosomatic Medicine, 52, 42-58. / No relevant predictor
85 / Kibler, J.L. & Lyons, J.A. (2004). Perceived coping ability mediateds the relationship between PTSD severity and heart rate recovery in veterans. Journal of Traumatic Stress, 17, 23-29. / No relevant sample
86 / Kiecolt-Glaser, J.K., Glaser, R., Cacioppo, J.T., & Malarkey, W.B. (1998). Marital stress: immunologic, neuroendocrine, and autonomic correlates. Annals of the New York Academy of Science, 840, 656-663. / No relevant predictor
87 / Kiecolt-Glaser, J.K., Glaser, R., Cacioppo, J.T., MacCallum, R.C., Snydersmith, M., Kim, C., & Malarkey, W.B. (1997). Marital conflict in older adults: endocrinological and immunological correlates. Psychosomatic Medicine, 59, 339-349. / No relevant predictor
88 / Kiecolt-Glaser, J.K., Malarkey, W.B., Chee, M., Newton, T., Cacioppo, J.T., Mao, H-Y., & Glaser, R. (1993). Negative behavior during marital conflict is associated with immunological down-regulation. Psychosomatic Medicine, 55, 395-409. / No relevant predictor
89 / Kirschbaum, C., Klauer, T., Flipp, S-H., & Hellhammer, D.H. (1995). Sex-specific effects of social support on cortisol and subjective responses to acute psychological stress. Psychosomatic Medicine, 57, 23-31. / No relevant predictor
90 / Knox, S., Svensson, J., Waller, D., & Theorell, T. (1988). Emotional coping and the psychophysiological substrates of elevated blood pressure. Behavioral Medicine, 14, 52-58. / No relevant outcome
91 / Kristenson, M., Olsson, A.G., & Kucinskiene, Z. (2005). Good self-related health is related to psychosocial resources and a strong cortisol response to acute stress: the LiVicordia study of middle-aged men. International Journal of Behavioral Medicine, 12, 153-160. / No relevant stressor
92 / Lang, P.J., Greenwald, M.K., Bradley, M.M., & Hamm, A.O. (1993). Looking at pictures: affective, facial, visceral, and behavioral reactions. Psychophysiology, 30, 261-273. / No relevant predictor
93 / Lepore, S.J. (1995). Cynicism, social support, and cardiovascular reactivity. Health Psychology, 14, 210-216. / No relevant predictor
94 / Lepore, S.J. Allen, K.A.M., & Evans, G.W. (1993). Social support lowers cardiovascular reactivity to an acute stressor. Psychomatic Medicine, 55, 518-524. / No relevant predictor
95 / Levin, A.P., Saoud, J.B., Strauman, T., Gorman, J.M., Fyer, A.J., Crawford, R., & Liebowitz, M.R. (1993). Responses of “generalized” and “discrete” social phobics during public speaking. Journal of Anxiety Disorders, 7, 207-221. / No relevant sample
96 / Liang, S-W., Jemerin, J.M., Tschann, J.M., Irwin, C.E., Wara, D.W., & Boyce, W.T. (1995). Life events, cardiovascular reactivity, and risk behavior in adolescent boys. Pediatrics, 96, 1101-1105. / No relevant stressor
97 / Lundberg, U., Hedman, M., Melin, B., & Frankenhaeuser, M. (1989). Type A behavior in healthy males and females as related to physiological reactivity and blood lipids. Psychosomatic Medicine, 51, 113-122. / No relevant stressor
98 / Malarkey, W.B., Kiecolt-Glaser, J.K., Pearl, D., & Glaser, R. (1994). Hostile behavior during marital conflict alters pituitary and adrenal hormones. Psychosomatic Medicine, 56, 41-51. / No relevant predictor
99 / Manuck, S.B., Proietti, J.M., Rader, S.J., & Polefrone, J.M. (1985). Parental hypertension, affect, and cardiovascular response to cognitive challenge. Psychosomatic Medicine, 47, 189-200. / No relevant predictor
100 / Markovitz, J.H., Matthews, K.A., Kiss, J., & Smitherman, T.C. (1996). Effects of hostility on platelet reactivity to psychological stress in coronary heart disease patients and in healthy controls. Psychosomatic Medicine, 58, 143-149. / No relevant predictor
101 / Marsland, A.L., Manuck, S.B., Fazzari, T.V., Stewart, C.J., & Rabin, B.S. (1995). Stability of individual differences in cellular immune responses to acute psychological stress. Psychosomatic Medicine, 57, 295-2985. / No relevant predictor
102 / Matthews, K.A., Berga, S.L., Owens, J.F., & Flory, J.D. (1998). Effects of short-term suppression of ovarian hormones on cardiovascular and neuroendocrine reactivity to stress in women. Psychoneuroendocrinology, 23, 307-322. / No relevant predictor
103 / Matthews, K.A., Gump, B.B., Block, D.R., & Allen, M.T. (1997). Does background stress heighten or dampen children’s cardiovascular responses to acute stress? Psychosomatic Medicine, 59, 488-496. / No relevant stressor
104 / Mauss, I.B., Wilhelm, F.H., & Gross, J.J. (2004). Is there less to social anxiety than meets the eye? Emotion experience, expression, and bodily responding. Cognition and Emotion, 18, 631-662. / Overlapping
105 / Mendonca-de-Souza, A.C., Souza, G.G., Vieira, A., Fischer, N.L., Souza, W.F., Rumjanek, V.M., Figueira, I., Mendlowicz, M.V., & Volchan, E. (2007). Negative affect as a predisposing factor for cortisol release after an acute stress - the impact of unpleasant priming. Stress, 10, 362-367. / No relevant predictor
106 / McCleery, J.M. & Goodwin, G.M. (2001). High and low neuroticism predict different cortisol responses to the combined dexamethasone-CRH test. Biological Psychiatry, 49, 410-415. / No relevant stressor
107 / Melliin, T., &Vuille, J-C. (1989). Rapidly developing overweight in school children as an indicator of psychosocial stress. Acta Padiatrica Scandinavica, 78, 568-575. / No relevant predictor
108 / Mengel, M.B., Blackett, P.R., Lawler, M.K., Volk, R.J., Viviani, N.J., Stamps, G.S., Dees, M.S., Davis, A.B., & Lovallo, W.R. (1992). Cardiovascular and neuroendocrine responsiveness in diabetic adolescents within a family context: association with poor diabetic control and dysfunctional familiy dynamics. Family Systems Medicine, 10, 5-33. / No relevant predictor