2. Stress Responses - Fight/Flight

    Cards (8)

      1. Stress Responses - Fight/Flight
      Short-term Stress:
      • events mediated by ‘sympathomeduallary pathway’ (SAM).
    • 2. Stress Responses - Fight/Flight
      Endocrine + ANS, stressful event:
      1. stress = hypothalamus triggers activity in sympathetic n.s. of ANS.
      2. ANS changes from parasympathetic state (resting) to psychologically aroused, sympathetic state.
      3. pituitary gland releases ACTH, produce adrenaline.
    • 2a. Stress Responses - Fight/Flight
      Endocrine + ANS, stressful event:
      4. adrenal medulla releases adrenaline into blood.
      5. adrenaline triggers changes in body, arousal necessary for fight/flight.
      6. parasympathetic n.s. returns body to resting state = ’rest and digest’.
    • 3. Stress Responses - Fight/Flight
      Sympathetic State:
      • increase heart-rate.
      • increase breathing.
      • inhibits digestion.
      Parasympathetic State:
      • decrease heart-rate.
      • decrease breathing.
      • stimulates digestion.
    • 4. Stress Responses - Fight/Flight
      Chronic Stress:
      • if stress continue after fight/flight, 2nd response.
      • HPA axis (hypothalamus, pituitary adrenal).
      • hypothalamus releases CRH into blood.
      • pituitary; CRH causes ATCH release - travel to adrenal glands.
    • 5. Stress Responses - Fight/Flight
      Adrenal Glands:
      • cortisol (stress response).
    • Stress Responses - Fight/Flight (Evaluation)
      Limitation:
      P - gender differences in f/f response.
      E - women, ‘tend + befriend‘ (Taylor, 2000); tend to young by nurturing + befriending others for protection.
      E - SRY gene on Y chromosome directs male development (aggression/‘fight’); no SRY combined w/ oxytocin + oestrogen prevents response in female (Lee et al).
      L - alpha bias (feminist argument), but due Taylor’s support may be beta bias.
    • Stress Responses - Fight/Flight (Evaluation)

      Limitation:
      P - not just fight/flight, but ’freeze’ too (Gray, 1988).
      E - avoid confrontation.
      L - animals/humans display freeze, alert to danger.