Associations between Stress Mindset and Changes in Positive Affect during a Speech Task: A Preliminary Study

Author:

Horiuchi Satoshi1,Takisawa Fumiya2,Tsuda Akira3,Aoki Shuntaro45,Okamura Hisayoshi6,Iwano Suguru7ORCID,Takii Mio2,Yoneda Kenichiro8

Affiliation:

1. Department of Social and Clinical Psychology, Hijiyama University, Hiroshima 732-8509, Japan

2. Faculty of Social Welfare, Iwate Prefectural University, Iwate 020-0693, Japan

3. Graduate School of Medical Science, Teikyo University of Sciences, Tokyo 120-0045, Japan

4. Center for Medical Education and Career Development, Fukushima Medical University, Fukushima 960-1295, Japan

5. Department of Neuropsychiatry, Fukushima Medical University, Fukushima 960-1295, Japan

6. Department of Psychology, Faculty of Literature, Kurume University, Fukuoka 830-0011, Japan

7. Cognitive Behavior Consulting Office, Hokkaido 060-0061, Japan

8. Graduate School of Humanities and Social Sciences, Hiroshima University, Hiroshima 739-8521, Japan

Abstract

A stress mindset is an individual’s belief that stress has either enhancing (stress-is-enhancing mindset: SEM) or debilitating (stress-is-debilitating mindset: SDM) consequences. This study examined the associations between SEM and changes in positive affect during a speech task using a sample of 32 Japanese college students as participants. It was hypothesized that participants with SEM would show a greater increase in positive affect over time than those with SDM. The participants rested for three minutes, prepared for three minutes, delivered a speech about themselves in front of an evaluator and video camera (task period), and again rested for three minutes. Positive affect was measured immediately after the two resting periods and during the speech. The participants were divided into groups of 17 and 15 in the SEM and SDM groups, respectively, based on their stress mindset scores. Both groups were fairly matched concerning age and male/female ratio. Change patterns of positive affect did not differ between the two groups, which did not support the hypothesis. However, positive affect was significantly higher in the SEM group compared with the SDM group. The present results differed from previous findings reported in North America. Inconsistent results are discussed related to differences in the speech task and cross-cultural variations of happiness and coping with stressors between North America and Japan.

Funder

JSPS KAKENHI

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference22 articles.

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