2002
DOI: 10.1111/j.1559-1816.2002.tb02063.x
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Past Disclosure and Conversational Experience: Effects on Cardiovascular Functioning While Women Talk

Abstract: A sense of self arises through social interaction and discourse, and this process of self‐construction might have physiological correlates. We argue that cardiovascular reactivity (CVR) during communication is related to the salience of subjectivity and self‐construction processes. We expected that the context in which a conversation occurs, the extent of disclosure during talk, and speakers’ conversational histories (past conversational experience and past tendency to disclose) would be related to CVR. Women … Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Compared to embodiment research, there has been relatively little empirical research that has attempted to link the socially constructed body with embodied feelings and sensations (Cromby, 2004) nor with its physiological processes (Lyons & Cromby, forthcoming). Processes of identity negotiation in routine talk may be related to physiological processes, such as cardiovascular function (Lyons & Cromby, forthcoming; Lyons & Farquhar, 2002; Lyons, Spicer, Tuffin, & Chamberlain, 2000), an idea which could be extended to explore physiological processes involved in the (re)production of masculinities and femininities in everyday life.…”
Section: Considerationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Compared to embodiment research, there has been relatively little empirical research that has attempted to link the socially constructed body with embodied feelings and sensations (Cromby, 2004) nor with its physiological processes (Lyons & Cromby, forthcoming). Processes of identity negotiation in routine talk may be related to physiological processes, such as cardiovascular function (Lyons & Cromby, forthcoming; Lyons & Farquhar, 2002; Lyons, Spicer, Tuffin, & Chamberlain, 2000), an idea which could be extended to explore physiological processes involved in the (re)production of masculinities and femininities in everyday life.…”
Section: Considerationsmentioning
confidence: 99%