
The literature relating to the learned control of autonomic processes, especially cardiovascular processes demonstrating that the activities of visceral response systems may be modifi ed by operant reinforcement and biofeedback procedures, has grown exponentially. This research seems to show behavioral properties in the cardiovascular system that were previously believed to be exclusive attributes of the somatic response systems; the implications of this for possible therapeutic use have received widespread publicity. Questions remained unanswered-about the nature of "voluntary" control and the conditions necessary for establishing it, the reciprocal effects of conditioned changes in cardiovascular and psychological or behavioral functioning, the use of cardiovascular events to index behavioral states, and the principles and techniques whereby operant conditioning of the cardiovascular system can be clinically applied.
This volume investigates the mechanisms of learned autonomic control and the extent to which cardiovascular processes can be modified through operant conditioning and biofeedback. Paul A. Obrist and his contributors synthesize existing research to determine whether visceral response systems exhibit behavioral properties previously attributed only to somatic systems. The text evaluates the clinical viability of these findings while addressing unresolved questions regarding the nature of voluntary control over autonomic functions.
What You Will Find
Experts recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of psychophysiology during a period of rapid growth in the field. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which serves as a foundational reference for researchers examining the intersection of behavioral psychology and cardiovascular health.
Page Count:
662
Publication Date:
1974-01-01
Publisher:
Aldine Pub. Co
ISBN-10:
0202251160
ISBN-13:
9780202251165
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