Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9646228 | Psychoneuroendocrinology | 2005 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Traumas have both immediate consequences and proactive consequences. Examples include learned helplessness, HPA-axis responsivity, gastrointestinal vulnerability to ulcer, and other correlates of anxiety disorders. Both immediate and proactive consequences may be modulated by behavioral and cognitive evolutionary evolved adaption processes, among which are forms of learning that enable 'coping'. Examples of associative and non-associative forms of coping and effects on learned helplessness, HPA-axis responsivity, and gastrointestinal vulnerability are presented. The importance of attention to behavioral contingencies in situations in which potentially traumatic events occur is emphasized as critical to understanding that it is not the physical event(s) per se that determine the immediate and long term consequences.
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Authors
J. Bruce Overmier, Robert Murison,