Research Areas and Selected Papers
Psychosocial Factors in Cardiovascular Disease
These papers are concerned with the role of social-contextual and
emotional factors in the development, course, and treatment of coronary
heart disease. Our most recent work in this area seeks to determine the
manner in which beliefs about cardiovascular disease and its treatment
interact with emotions and thereby influence secondary prevention
behaviors in coronary patients.
Contrada, R. J., Boulifard, D. A., Hekler, E. B., Ilder, E. L.,
Spruill, T. M., Labouvie, W. W., and Krause, T. J. (2007) Psychosocial
Factors in Heart Surgery: Presurgical Vulnerability and
Postsurgical Recovery. Health Psychology, in press.
Hekler, E. B., Rubenstein, J., Coups, E. J., Gilligan, S., Steiner, M.
J., Krause, T. J., Tannenbaum, A. K., Leventhal, E., A.,
Kusnecov, A. W., and Contrada, R. J. (2007). Inflammatory Markers
in Acute Myocardial Infarction Patients: Preliminary Evidence of
a Prospective Association with Depressive Symptoms. Journal of
Applied Biobehavioral Research, in press.
Contrada, R. J., Boulifard, D. A., Idler, E. L., Krause, T. J., and
Labouvie, E. W. (2006). Course of Depressive Symptoms in Heart
Surgery Patients: Confirmatory Analysis of the Factor Pattern and
Latent Mean Structure of the Center for Epidemiologic Studies
Depression Scale. Psychosomatic Medicine, 68,
922-930.
Holmes, S. D., Krantz, D. S., Rogers, H., Gottdiener, J., and Contrada,
R. J. (2006). Mental stress and coronary artery disease: A
multidisciplinary guide. Progress in Cardiovascular Diseases, 49,
106-122.
Goyal, T. M., Idler, E. L., Krause, T. J., & Contrada, R. J.
(2005). Quality of life following cardiac surgery: Impact
of the severity and course of depressive symptoms, Psychosomatic
Medicine, 67, 759-765.
Contrada, R. J., Goyal, T. M., Cather, C., Rafalson, L., Idler, E. L.,
and Krause, T. J. (2004). Psychosocial factors in outcomes
of heart surgery: The impact of religious involvement and
depressive symptoms. Health Psychology, 23, 227-238.
Contrada, R. J., Idler, E. L., Goyal, T. M., Cather, C., Rafalson, L.,
& Krause, T. J. (2004). Why not find out whether
religious beliefs predict surgical outcomes? If they do, why not
find out why? Health Psychology, 23,
243-246.
Rosen, R. C., Contrada, R. J., Gorkin, L., & Kostis, J. B.
(1997). Determinants of perceived health in patients with left
ventricular dysfunction: A structural modeling analysis.
Psychosomatic Medicine, 59, 193-200.
Contrada, R. J., Leventhal, E., & Anderson, J. R. (1994).
Psychological preparation for surgery: Marshaling individual and
social resources to optimize self-regulation. In S. Maes, M.
Johnston, & H. Leventhal (Eds.), International Yearbook of Health
Psychology, Volume 3 (pp. 219-266). New York: Wiley.
Psychophysiology of Personality, Stress, and Emotion
We have used psychophysiologic measures to identify cardiovascular
processes that may account for health-related effects of stress and
emotion and of the Type A behavior Pattern, Trait Hostility, and
Repressive Coping . Most recently, we have begun to use
psychophysiological techniques to assess cognitive and affective
processes and attributes involved in reactions to threatening
stimuli. These include studies of human startle, assessment of
emotional style via electroencephalography (EEG), and measurement of
event-related potentials (ERP).
Chen, Y. Y., and Contrada, R. J. (2007). Religious Involvement
and Perceived Social Support: Interactive Effects on
Cardiovascular Reactivity to Laboratory Stressors. Journal of
Applied Biobehavioral Research, in press.
Chen, Y. Y., Gilligan, S., Coups, E. J., & Contrada, R. J.
(2005). Hostility and perceived social support: Interactive
effects on cardiovascular reactivity to laboratory stressors.
Annals of Behavioral Medicine, 29, 37-43.
Guyll, M., and Contrada, R. J. (1998). Trait hostility and
ambulatory cardiovascular activity in males and females. Health
Psychology, 17, 30-39.
Contrada, R. J., Czarnecki, E. M., and Pan, L-C. (1997).
Health-damaging personality traits and verbal-autonomic dissociation:
The role of self-control and environmental control. Health
Psychology, 16, 451-457.
Mayne, T. J., O'Leary, A., McCrady, B. S., Contrada, R. J., and
Labouvie, E. (1997). The differential effects of marital stress
on emotional, physiological, and immune functions in men and
women. Psychology and Health, 12, 277-288.
Newton, T. L., Haviland, J., and Contrada, R. J. (1996). The face
of repressive coping: Social context and the display of hostile
expressions and social smiles. Journal of Nonverbal Behavior, 20,
3-22.
Newton, T. L., and Contrada, R. J. (1994). Alexithymia and
repression: Contrasting emotion-focused coping styles.
Psychosomatic Medicine, 56, 457-462.
Lacy, C. R., Contrada, R. J., Robbins, M. L., Tannenbaum, A. K.,
Moreyra, A. E., Chelton, S., and Kostis, J. B. (1995). Coronary
vasoconstriction induced by mental stress (simulated public
speaking). American Journal of Cardiology, 75, 503-505.
Newton, T. L., and Contrada, R. J. (1992). Verbal-autonomic
response dissociation in repressive coping: The influence of
social context. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 62,
159-167.
Contrada, R. J., Hilton, W. F., and Glass, D. C. (1991). Effects
of emotional imagery on physiologic and facial responses in Type A and
Type B individuals. Journal of Psychosomatic Research, 35,
391-397.
Sayette, M. A., Contrada, R. J., and Wilson, G. T. (1990).
Alcohol and correspondence between self-report and physiological
measures of anxiety. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 28, 351-354.
Contrada, R. J. (1989). Type A behavior, personality hardiness,
and cardiovascular responses to stress. Journal of Personality
and Social Psychology, 57, 895-903.
Ethnicity, Ethnicity-Related Stress, and Health
Ethnicity related stress is defined as the perception of events and
conditions that acquire threat value because of a person’s
knowledge of being a member of a particular ethnic group. We have
developed measures of ethnicity-related stressors, such as ethnic
discrimination, stereotype confirmation concern, and own-group
conformity pressure. We have also sought to demonstration that
these factors have implications for psychological and physical
well-being.
Brondolo, E., Kelly, K. P., Coakley, V., Gordon, T., Thompson, S.,
Levy, E., Cassells, A., Tobin, J. N., & Contrada, R. J.
(2005). The Perceived Ethnic Discrimination Questionnaire:
Development and preliminary validation of a community version.
Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 35, 335-365.
Contrada, R. J., Ashmore, R. D., Gary, M. L., Coups, E., Egeth,
J. D., Sewell, A., Ewell, K., Goyal, T., Chasse, V. (2001).
Measures of Ethnicity-Related Stress: Psychometric properties,
ethnic group differences, and associations with well-being.
Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 31,1775-1820.
Contrada, R. J., Ashmore, R. D., Gary, M. L., Coups, E., Egeth, J. D.,
Sewell, A., Ewell, K., Goyal, T., Chasse, V. (2000). Ethnicity-related
sources of stress and their effects on well-being. Current
Directions in Psychological Science, 9, 136-139.
Reprinted in Ruscher, J. B., &
Hammer, E. Y. (2004) (Eds.), Current directions in social psychology
(pp. 146-152). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson/Prentice Hall.
Reprinted in Miller,
G., & Chen, E. (2005) (Eds.), Current directions in health
psychology (pp. 38-44). Upper Saddle River, NJ:
Pearson/Prentice Hall.
Hudson, S. V., Leventhal, H., Contrada, R. J., Leventhal, E. A., and
Brownlee, S. (2000). Predicting retention for older, African
Americans in a community study and a clinical study: Does
anything work? Journal of Mental Health and Aging, 6, 1-13.
Contrada, R. J., and Ashmore, R. D. (1999). Self and social
identity: Key to understanding social and behavioral aspects of
physical health and disease? In R. J. Contrada and R. D. Ashmore
(Eds.), Self, social identity, and physical health: Interdisciplinary
Explorations (pp. 3-20). New York: Oxford University Press.
Ashmore, R. D., and Contrada, R. J. (1999). Self, social identity, and
the analysis of social and behavioral aspects of physical health and
disease. In R. J. Contrada and R. D. Ashmore (Eds.), Self, social
identity, and physical health: Interdisciplinary Explorations (pp.
240-255). New York: Oxford University Press.
Brondolo, E., Masheb, R., Stores, J., Stockhammer, T., Tunick, W.,
Melhado, E., Karlin, W. A., Schwartz, J., Harburg, E., and Contrada, R.
J. (1998). Anger-related traits and response to interpersonal conflict
among New York City Traffic Agents. Journal of Applied Social
Psychology, 28, 2089-2118.