Could academic experience modulate psychophysiological stress response of biomedical sciences students in laboratory?
- PMID: 32565404
- DOI: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2020.113017
Could academic experience modulate psychophysiological stress response of biomedical sciences students in laboratory?
Abstract
The aim of the present research was to analyse the subjective and objective psychophysiological stress response of experienced and non-experienced Pharmacy and Biotechnology students in laboratory practices. We analysed in 82 Pharmacy and Biotechnology degree students divided into two groups (non-experienced: n: 53; experienced: n: 29) the autonomic stress response by the analysis of heart rate variability (HRV) before, during and after and distress perception before and after a laboratory practice. Results showed how students in both groups presented a large anticipatory anxiety response at the beginning of the practise (low HRV values). During the entire laboratory practice, non-experienced students showed a maintained sympathetic modulation while experienced students presented a higher parasympathetic modulation (high HRV values) consistent with a habituation process. Laboratory practise performed by Pharmacy and Biotechnology students produced an anticipatory anxiety response independently of their experience, but, non-experienced students showed a lower habituation response in both subjective and objective stress records than experienced students at the end of the laboratory practice.
Keywords: Autonomic modulation; Education; Experience; Heart rate variability; Simulation; Stress response.
Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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