High Blood Pressure May Lead to Missed Emotional Cues

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Category : Health

 

A recently published study by Clemson University psychology professor James A. McCubbin and colleagues has shown that people with higher blood pressure have reduced ability to recognize angry, fearful, sad and happy faces and text passages.

Joan

 

 

 

 

Science News

ScienceDaily— Your ability to recognize emotional content in faces and texts is linked to your blood pressure, according to a Clemson University researcher.

A recently published study by Clemson University psychology professor James A. McCubbin and colleagues has shown that people with higher blood pressure have reduced ability to recognize angry, fearful, sad and happy faces and text passages.

“It’s like living in a world of email without smiley faces,” McCubbin said. “We put smiley faces in emails to show when we are just kidding. Otherwise some people may misinterpret our humor and get angry.”

Some people have what McCubbin calls “emotional dampening” that may cause them to respond inappropriately to anger or other emotions in others.

“For example, if your work supervisor is angry, you may mistakenly believe that he or she is just kidding,” McCubbin said. “This can lead to miscommunication, poor job performance and increased psychosocial distress.”

In complex social situations like work settings, people rely on facial expressions and verbal emotional cues to interact with others.

“If you have emotional dampening, you may distrust others because you cannot read emotional meaning in their face or their verbal communications,” he said. “You may even take more risks because you cannot fully appraise threats in the environment.”

McCubbin said the link between dampening of emotions and blood pressure is believed to be involved in the development of hypertension and risk for coronary heart disease, the biggest killer of both men and women in the U.S. Emotional dampening also may be involved in disorders of emotion regulation, such as bipolar disorders and depression.

His theory of emotional dampening also applies to positive emotions.

“Dampening of positive emotions may rob one of the restorative benefits of close personal relations, vacations and hobbies,” he said.

McCubbin’s study, published in the journal Psychosomatic Medicine, was supported by the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute and the National Institute on Aging, both parts of the National Institutes of Health.

The journal article was co-authored by Marcellus M. Merritt of the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee psychology department; John J. Sollers III if the psychological medicine department at the University of Auckland; Dr. Michele K. Evans of the Laboratory of Immunology, National Institute on Aging; Alan B. Zonderman, Laboratory of Behavioral Neuroscience, National Institute on Aging; Dr. Richard D. Lane of the psychiatry department, University of Arizona; and Julian F. Thayer of the Ohio State University psychology department.

This article was selected on 3/6/2012 by MOW staff from The Science Daily online publication

The original article may be found at:

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/11/111103120455.htm

 

Seniors Are Saying No to High Tech

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Category : News and Information

Government and the private sector are shifting to online tools as their dominant form of public communication. It saves time and money, and provides more responsive public services. But surveys of Internet and technology use show that many, if not most, older consumers are bypassed with online communication.

Joan

 

August 15, 2011

The digital revolution may be changing the way we live and work. But large numbers of older Americans are not going online, using smartphones, or even participating in the benefits of electronic healthcare tools specifically designed to help them.

The costs of not participating in electronic communications are growing. Government and the private sector are shifting to online tools as their dominant form of public communication. It saves time and money, and provides more responsive public services. But surveys of Internet and technology use show that many, if not most, older consumers are bypassed with online communication.

Earlier this year, for example, the U.S. Social Security Administration said it would stop sending paper statements to Americans explaining their Social Security benefits. Instead, such statements would be available online. As part of a broader government policy, Social Security will also be ending paper-based benefit checks by May 2013.

The Social Security Administration says growing use of the Internet will allow it to save money on paper-based statements and still meet public needs. However, while the agency has stopped mailing out its annual statement of benefits, it has yet to begin offering this information online. And an agency spokesman says privacy rules prevent the agency from even measuring how many people visit its website. The agency knows that total page views on the site are rising, the spokesman said, but it is not allowed to collect specifics on how many beneficiaries are actually using the site.

The most probable answer, however, is “not many.” According to thePewResearchCenter’s Internet & American Life Project, only 42 percent of Americans age 65 and older go online at all. Of these, even smaller percentages use the Internet to research information on specific topics. These numbers are rising, but still are roughly half the level of younger Americans. The Social Security Administration does say it plans to provide paper-based statements to older people, but has not yet spelled out the timing of this effort.

Laurie Orlov is a former Forrester Research analyst who started her own company, Aging in Place Technology Watch, to research and provide consulting advice about seniors and technology. While there have been some gains in technology use by older consumers, price and complexity are barriers to larger gains, as is seniors’ comfort with familiar ways of doing things.

“People are pretty inflexible” about technology use, she says, “so there’s a chance those numbers won’t improve much.” Is it fair to describe seniors as the lost generation in terms of technology? “I think they are,” she says.

Orlov can rattle off an impressive list of the costs to seniors of not being online, from paying extra for airline tickets by using a reservations agent, to missing out on online coupons and other digital bargains, to becoming isolated from grandchildren and other family members who increasingly rely on digital devices to communicate.

Baby boomers, by contrast, are using new technology at rates nearly equal to younger consumers. They are likely to continue such habits as they join the ranks of senior citizens, and it will be this trend that will firmly establish electronic communication and commerce as a senior activity.

For now, Orlov says, she’s extremely optimistic that computers and hand-held tablets and other devices will become easier to use and more friendly to inexperienced and older consumers alike.

Ingenious “apps” and uses for smartphones and other mobile communications devices are driving broad gains in consumer adoption. Orlov thinks the improvements in user interfaces and ease-of-use gains in these mass markets will help all consumers, including seniors. “I think technology is becoming multi-age friendly,” she says.

“We’re at the beginning of a remarkable time,” she says. “It’s going to get better because it can. That’s the nature of technology.”

Orlov has tabulated senior use of new technologies by culling Pew’s Internet use surveys. Here are the current use levels, by age, for 11 digital devices and related activities:

 

Percentages of Americans Using Digital Technologies

Category

All Consumers

Boomers 50-64

Seniors 65+

Go online

79%

78%

42%

Use search engine daily

59%

52%

37%

Use video sharing site

71%

54%

31%

Look online for health information

59%

58%

29%

Use social networking site

61%

47%

26%

Have a cellphone

85%

85%

58%

Have a smartphone

35%

24%

11%

Make Internet calls

24%

19%

18%

Have an E-reader

12%

13%

6%

Have a tablet

8%

8%

2%

Have a mobile health “app”

9%

6%

5%

Source: Laurie Orlov,PewResearchCenter’s Internet & American Life Project

This article was selected on 12/14/11 by MOW staff from U.S. News & World Report online publication

 

The original article may be found at:

http://money.usnews.com/money/blogs/the-best-life/2011/08/15/seniors-are-saying-no-to-high-tech?s_cid=related-links:TOP

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