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Psychosomatic Medicine, Vol 41, Issue 1 2-18, Copyright © 1979 by American Psychosomatic Society
ORIGINAL ARTICLES |
LF Van Egeren
Sixty subjects classified as either Type A or Type B interacted in pairs by pressing buttons which transmitted messages through a television screen while the heart rate and digital blood volume pulse were computer-monitored. Partners could cooperate, compete, punish, reward, or withdraw on each interaction and could send 1 of 55 messages communicating feelings, requests, and behavioral intentions between interactions. Interactions and communications between Type A subjects were strikingly different from Type B subjects. Type A's were noticeably more aggressive competitive. Type A dyads also exhibited larger digital vasomotor responses than Type B dyads. When Type A subjects and Type B subjects interacted with each other, rather than with a same-type partner, the differences between them in behavior and vasomotor response largely disappeared.
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C. C. Gotay Cooperation and Competition as a Function of Type A Behavior Pers Soc Psychol Bull, September 1, 1981; 7(3): 386 - 392. [Abstract] |
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