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    • Journal of Advanced Student Science (JASS)
    • 2015
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    • School of Education, UW-Madison
    • Journal of Advanced Student Science (JASS)
    • 2015
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    The Effect of Induced Stress on Fine Motor Accuracy

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    The Effect of Induced Stress on Fine Motor Accuracy .pdf (708.8Kb)
    Date
    2015
    Author
    Diny, Michael D.
    Kainz, Dani L.
    Greenhalgh, Nikki P.
    Klemp, Abby S.
    Publisher
    Journal of Advanced Student Sciences (JASS)
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    The stress response is a cascade of physiological changes resulting from activation of the sympathetic nervous system that occurs when one is subjected to a threatening situation. The physiological changes brought about by the stress response are well documented and understood, but it is unclear whether the stress response has any adverse effects on fine motor accuracy. This experiment explores the relationship between induced stress response and motor accuracy by inducing a stress response in subjects and analyzing their performance on a tracing task before and after the stressor. We analyzed the effectiveness of the stressor by measuring heart rate and electrodermal activity, using T-tests to confirm a statistically significant increase in each after exposure to the stressor. Tracing allowed us to measure the area spent outside of the line as a determinant of fine motor accuracy. Our results did not show significant evidence that an increase in heart rate or EDA (implying an increased stress response) were linked to a decrease in fine motor accuracy.
    Subject
    motor accuracy
    stress
    induced stress response
    sympathetic nervous system
    EDA
    heart rate
    Permanent Link
    http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/80218
    Type
    Article
    Description
    An article that appeared in JASS, issue 2015
    Part of
    • 2015

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