Individual Differences in Auditory, Pain, and Motor Stimulation

Author:

Schwerdtfeger Andreas1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, Johannes Gutenberg-University Mainz, Germany

Abstract

Abstract. Augmenting/reducing is a personality dimension related to the processing of sensory stimuli. Augmenters are assumed to augment the impact of stimuli leading to stimulation-avoidant behavior and lower pain tolerance. Reducers are assumed to attenuate sensory stimuli leading to stimulation-seeking behavior and higher pain tolerance. Augmenting/reducing can be assessed by the method of evoked potentials or - as in this study - by questionnaire. Two studies were conducted to examine associations between augmenting/reducing as assessed by questionnaire and stimulus intensity modulation. Study 1 found reducers (n = 24, 12 females) to more frequently consume psychoactive substances and to turn music on louder than augmenters (n = 25, 12 females) even after controlling for individual hearing ability. In Study 2, reducers (n = 19, 10 females) were more pain tolerant than augmenters (n = 18, 9 females) and this difference increased with increasing stimulation time. Moreover, reducers were faster than augmenters in a rapid tapping task but there was no difference in a lower-stimulation tracking task. The results suggest that differences between augmenters and reducers are most reliable when the stimulation potential is high. The clinical relevance of this construct is discussed.

Publisher

Hogrefe Publishing Group

Subject

Biological Psychiatry,General Psychology

Reference72 articles.

1. Extraversion and rapid tapping: reactive inhibition or general cortical activation as determinants of performance differences

2. Barnes, G.E. (1985). The Vando R-A scale as a measure of stimulus reducing/augmenting. In Strelau, J. (Ed), Theories, measurement techniques, and development. The series in clinical and community psychology (Vol. 1, pp. 171-180). Washington, DC: Hemisphere

3. On the Reliability of Augmenting/Reducing

4. Visual evoked potential stimulus intensity modulation and sensation seeking in thrill-seekers

5. Augmenting/reducing assessed by evoked potentials and the Vando scale

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