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Dive into the research topics where Peter Seraganian is active.

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Featured researches published by Peter Seraganian.


Psychosomatic Medicine | 1983

Aerobic fitness level and reactivity to psychosocial stress: physiological, biochemical, and subjective measures.

David Sinyor; Sandra G. Schwartz; François Péronnet; Guy R. Brisson; Peter Seraganian

&NA; Aerobic fitness is associated with numerous physiological adaptations which permit physical stress to be coped with more efficiently. The present experiment examined whether aerobic fitness influences emotional response. Heart rate, biochemical measures (catecholamines, cortisol, prolactin, lactic acid), and self‐reported arousal and anxiety were monitored in 15 highly trained and 15 untrained subjects at various points before, during and following exposure to a series of psychosocial stressors. Heart rate and subjective arousal level increased markedly during the stressors in both groups. Trained subjects showed higher levels of norepinephrine and prolactin early in the stress period, more rapid heart rate recovery following the stressors, and lower levels of anxiety at the conclusion of the session. This more rapid heart rate and subjective recovery from psychosocial stress, suggests that aerobically trained individuals may be capable of faster recovery in both physiological and subjective dimensions of emotionality. The differences in reactivity profiles between the aerobically trained and untrained were discussed in light of models that have dealt with the adaptiveness of emotional response.


Health Psychology | 1986

The Montreal Type A Intervention Project: Major findings.

Ethel Roskies; Peter Seraganian; Robert Oseasohn; James A. Hanley; R. Collu; N. Martin; C. Smilga

This article reports a comparison of three short-term treatments (aerobic exercise, cognitive-behavioral stress management, and weight training) in modifying behavioral and cardiovascular reactivity to laboratory psychosocial stressors in healthy Type A men. One hundred seven men completed the treatments and evaluations, 33 in the aerobic exercise group, and 37 each in the cognitive-behavioral stress management and weight-training groups. The stress management group showed significantly greater changes in behavioral reactivity (reductions of 13% to 23% below initial values) than the two physical exercise groups, which did not differ significantly from each other. For physiological reactivity, changes attributable to intervention were trivial for all three treatment groups. The positive finding of reduced behavioral reactivity as a result of the stress management intervention is of potential clinical significance and warrants further exploration. The lack of meaningful reductions in physiological reactivity also requires further exploration in that it raises questions concerning the ability of behavioral treatments in general to modify physiological reactivity, the ability of existing measures to assess accurately changes that are produced and, most fundamental of all, the relevance of physiological reactivity as an outcome measure for treatment efforts with Type As.


Journal of Psychosomatic Research | 1984

Physical fitness level and autonomic reactivity to psychosocial stress

Sandra Keller; Peter Seraganian

Two studies explored the influence of aerobic fitness level on autonomic reactivity to psychosocial stress. Experiment 1 employed a correlational, repeated measures design. A total of 45 men who were physically trained, untrained, or training were tested at three-week intervals over nine weeks. The measure of autonomic reactivity was lability in electrodermal activity during two speeded mental tasks designed to induce psychosocial stress. In the initial test session, trained subjects showed faster autonomic recovery from this stress than did untrained or training subjects; in subsequent test sessions involving the repeated administration of the same tasks, the three groups were indistinguishable. Experiment 2 employed 60 subjects who were randomly assigned to 10-week aerobic exercise, meditation, or music appreciation programs. In each session, two psychosocial stressors selected from a battery of six tasks were counterbalanced across treatments and sessions. Over the course of the study, participants in the exercise program improved significantly in physical fitness and also showed faster recovery in the electrodermal response. This quicker autonomic recovery may allow the aerobically fit to cope more effectively with emotional stress.


Addictive Behaviors | 2002

Matching substance abuse aftercare treatments to client characteristics.

Thomas G. Brown; Peter Seraganian; Jacques Tremblay; Helen M. Annis

This study investigated matching client attributes to different aftercare treatments. A naturalistic sample of adults entering substance abuse treatment was randomized into either Structured Relapse Prevention (RP, n=61) or a 12-Step Facilitation (TSF, n=72) aftercare program. Four patient attributes were matched to treatment: age, gender, substance abuse profile, and psychological status. Substance use outcomes were assessed 3 and 6 months posttreatment. At 6 months, four significant matches were uncovered. Females and individuals with a multiple substance abuse profile reported better alcohol outcomes with TSF aftercare than their cohorts exposed to RP aftercare. Individuals with high psychological distress at treatment entry were able to maintain longer periods of posttreatment abstinence with TSF aftercare compared to their cohorts exposed to RP. Inversely, RP was found to maintain abstinence significantly longer for individuals reporting low distress compared to those with high distress. Finally, better outcomes were achieved when random assignment to aftercare was consistent with participant preference. Overall, an Alcoholics Anonymous approach to aftercare appears to provide the most favorable substance use outcomes for most groups of substance abusers. RP may be most suitable for clients whose psychological distress is low, especially where maintenance of abstinence is targeted. Where choice in aftercare program is possible, matching client preference with type of aftercare program can improve outcome.


Addictive Behaviors | 1998

The incidence and characteristics of violent men in substance abuse treatment

Thomas G. Brown; Annette Werk; Tom Caplan; Nancy Shields; Peter Seraganian

Linkage between marital violence and substance abuse has been noted in men seeking treatment for substance-use disorders. The present study examined (1) the incidence of family violence in men admitted into substance abuse treatment; (2) the psychosocial characteristics associated with marital violence; and (3) the comparability of violent substance abusers to their treatment cohorts. Fifty-nine men in substance abuse treatment involved in a significant relationship in the past year were assessed for substance abuse, family violence, psychosocial functioning, and personality attributes. Fifty-eight percent of men reported at least one incident of physical familial violence in the past year, while 100% of the men reported having engaged in psychological abuse in the past year. Additionally, greater violence was associated with interpersonal insensitivity, hostile outbursts, and poorer overall functioning independent of substance abuse. Finally, violent male substance abusers reported significantly more hostility, suspiciousness, projection of blame, and interpersonal inadequacy than did the less violent substance abusers. These findings suggest that, in drug-treatment settings, systematic objective screening for family violence is routinely called for.


Journal of Psychosomatic Research | 1985

Exaggerated psychophysiological reactivity: Issues in quantification and reliability

Peter Seraganian; James A. Hanley; Barbara J. Hollander; Ethel Roskies; Christine Smilga; Norman D. Martin; R. Collu; Robert Oseasohn

Marked physiological reactivity to challenging mental tasks has been associated with elevated risk for, as well as the presence of, coronary heart disease. However, little systematic enquiry into the reliability and quantification of such exaggerated reactivity has emerged. Subjects were 32 male, managerial employees, ranging in age from 22 to 56 yr, who satisfied the following criteria: no history or current signs of heart disease, presence of Type A behavior pattern as revealed by the Structured Interview, and an increase during an initial psychosocial stress testing of at least 25% over baseline in at least three out of five psychophysiological indices. Heart rate, systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood pressure, plasma epinephrine and plasma norepinephrine levels were monitored while challenging mental tasks were performed in three sessions (screening, pretraining and posttraining) spaced several weeks apart. Psychophysiological reactivity during the tasks emerged as a consistent trait. For all five measures, change scores from baseline during the screening session were significantly correlated with change scores during the pretraining session. Moreover, the magnitude of the change scores were similar in the screening and pretraining sessions. Analysis of cross correlations within and between indices provided little support for the use of data transformations such as residual scores or analysis of covariance. Finally, on four out of five measures, the challenging tasks were found to be comparable in the degree of reactivity elicited. These findings suggest that, for selected Type A men, exaggerated psychophysiological reactivity occurs reliably when monitored with multiple indices, appears insensitive to mere passage of time, and can be uniformly elicited by a variety of tasks.


Violence & Victims | 1999

Violent substance abusers in domestic violence treatment.

Thomas G. Brown; Annette Werk; Tom Caplan; Peter Seraganian

Although substance abuse is frequently encountered in men receiving services in violence treatment settings, systematic study of these ‘dual-problem’ men has lagged. This study had two main objectives: (1) the characterization of psychoactive substance abuse disorders in a naturalistic sample of men in domestic violence treatment; and (2) clarification of the role of substance abuse on the sociodemographic, personality, psychosocial, and abuse characteristics of dual-problem men. Fifty-three adult men who were attending domestic violence treatment were recruited. They were administered the Addiction Severity Index, the Conflicts Tactics Scale, Structured Clinical Diagnostic Interview, the 16PF and the Symptoms Checklist-90. Partners, when available, were asked to provide corroboration. Sixty-three percent of the men had a current diagnosis of psychoactive substance abuse or dependence, while 92.5% had a lifetime diagnosis. Of the former, the majority was diagnosed as multiply dependent on alcohol and other drugs. As the severity of the substance abuse increased, so too did the dangerousness and frequency of abusive behaviors. Moreover, dual-problem men reported more hostility, apprehension, frustration and suspiciousness and past arrests than did their violence-only cohorts as well as a history of multiple (unsuccessful) treatments for substance abuse. These findings suggest that the trend toward multiple drug complaints seen in other clinical milieus is also being confronted in conjugal violence settings. In addition to the greater therapeutic challenge such dual-problem men present, these findings speak to the need to investigate integrated treatment approaches to improve the outlook of men grappling with both conjugal violence and multiple substance abuse problems.


Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment | 1993

Alcohol and cocaine abusers 6 months after traditional treatment: do they fare as well as problem drinkers?

Thomas G. Brown; Peter Seraganian; Jacques Tremblay

Problem drinkers (N = 49) and individuals presenting with both alcohol and cocaine problems (N = 51) admitted to a traditional 28-day alcoholism treatment milieu were compared on their psychosocial, psychological, neuropsychological functioning and substance abuse at admission as well as at six months posttreatment follow-up. On admission, alcohol and cocaine patients were younger, more likely to live alone or with their family of origin, to report having started using alcohol at an earlier age, to have fewer alcohol-related problems and to have fewer years of but more diversity in their substance abuse than the alcohol-only patients. Otherwise both groups were more similar than different on psychosocial, psychological and neuropsychological dimensions. At six-months posttreatment, both groups showed similar improvement on most dimensions of functioning measured. However, a significantly greater proportion of the alcohol and cocaine abusers admitted to having relapsed in the previous six months, reported significantly fewer average days of abstinence than the alcohol group since terminating treatment, and were more likely to present urine specimens indicative of recent substance abuse at the six-month follow-up interview. Thus, traditional approaches to alcoholism treatment may be less effective in establishing abstinence for individuals with both alcohol and cocaine problems. Adaptations to treatment to reduce the risk for relapse faced by alcohol and cocaine abusers in such milieu are discussed.


Psychology & Health | 1987

Failure to alter psychophysiological reactivity in type a men with physical exercise or stress management programs

Peter Seraganian; Ethel Roskies; James A. Hanley; Robert Oseasohn; R. Collu

Abstract Psychophysiological reactivity has been associated with heightened risk of coronary heart disease. Since behavioral processes may contribute to disease etiology, the possibility arises that they might also contribute to disease prevention. The capability of behavioral interventions to modify exaggerated reactivity in Type A men. was therefore, brought under experimental scrutiny. Subjects were 107 male managers. who met the following criteria: (1) no history or current signs of heart disease. (2) presence of Type A behavior pattern, and (3) exaggerated psychophysiological reactivity to mental stress. After matching for age and physical fitness level. participants were randomly assigned to one of three 10-week intervention programs: aerohic training, weight training and cognitive-behavioral stress management. Heart rate and blood pressure were monitored while challenging mental tasks were performed in pre-training and post-training laboratory sessions before and after the intervention programs. Al...


Physiology & Behavior | 1988

Failure to alter sympathoadrenal response to psychosocial stress following aerobic training

David Sinyor; François Péronnet; Guy Brisson; Peter Seraganian

This experiment assessed the impact of aerobic training on sympathoadrenal, heart rate and subjective responses to psychosocial stress. Subjects were six previously sedentary males who demonstrated marked improvement in fitness level following 10 weeks of training. Plasma samples, heart rate and subjective arousal ratings were obtained prior to, during, and following exposure to stressful mental tasks within a laboratory session. With the exception of training-related bradycardia which was manifest throughout the session, no changes in plasma epinephrine and norepinephrine concentrations, heart rate or subjective reactivity or recovery were seen. These findings are inconsistent with the hypothesized beneficial effects of aerobic training on stress-response. Methodological factors such as self-selection inherent in previous correlation work or the duration of the training program should be considered in this context. The potential contribution of training-related bradycardia to enhanced coping with challenging situations is explored.

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Jacques Tremblay

Douglas Mental Health University Institute

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Attila Szabo

Eötvös Loránd University

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Robert Oseasohn

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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Ethel Roskies

Université de Montréal

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R. Collu

Université de Montréal

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