Robert Edelberg
Rutgers University
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Featured researches published by Robert Edelberg.
Psychosomatic Medicine | 1996
Paul M. Lehrer; Stuart M. Hochron; Richard Carr; Robert Edelberg; Robert M. Hamer; Andrew C. Jackson; Stephen W. Porges
This study investigated pulmonary and autonomic reactions to active and passive behavioral laboratory tasks among asthmatic subjects.It also examined the relationship between airway irritability, as measured by the methacholine challenge test (MCT), and autonomic activity and reactivity to these tasks. Fifty-one asthmatic and 37 nonasthmatic subjects were exposed to psychological laboratory tasks involving either active (mental arithmetic and reaction time) or passive (films depicting shop accidents and thoracic surgery) response. The MCT was given to asthmatics in a separate session. Active tasks reduced respiratory impedance, as measured by forced oscillation pneumography. They also increased heart rate and appeared to block vagal activity, as measured by respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA). Airway irritability as assessed by the MCT was positively related to amplitude of RSA and to skin conductance levels. Our data suggest that active and passive behavioral tasks may produce different pulmonary effects among both asthmatic and nonasthmatic individuals. Engaging in tasks requiring active responses may produce temporary improvements in pulmonary function. No autonomic differences were obtained between asthmatics and nonasthmatics in physiological response to stress, but greater cholinergic receptor sensitivity was suggested among high responders to methacholine.
Archive | 1993
Robert Edelberg
Although response amplitude and response rate have served as the primary electrodermal measures in behavioral research, several lines of evidence have given hope that in addition to these quantitative indicators, electrodermal activity might provide qualitative indices as well. When one examines the behavioral correlates of the electrodermal reflex, it becomes evident that EDA may be associated with very different adaptations, e.g. tactual exploration, grasping, thermoregulation, or ambulation (Darrow, 1927; Edelberg, 1973a; Fowles, 1986; Boucsein, 1988), as well as the abstracted representation of such actions, for example information intake. The reviews elsewhere in this volume by Roy et al and by Sequeira-Martinho and Roy, covering the neurophysiological systems underlying these adaptations, reveal the existence in the CNS of at least two relatively independent descending pathways that control electrodermal activity (EDA), one of reticular origin under cortical and sensory influences (Bloch, 1965), the other a direct corticospinal system, suggesting that different cutaneous adjustments may follow activation of these respective areas. If true, a two-effector system may be an effective means of accomplishing such adjustments.
Journal of Behavioral Medicine | 1990
Leora C. Swartzman; Robert Edelberg; Ekkehard Kemmann
Hot flushes are the most frequently reported menopausal symptom. The primary study goal was to develop criteria for the identification of hot flushes that ultimately could be applied independent of symptom report. Twenty-one postmenopausal women each underwent psychophysiological monitoring. Physiological activity accompanying their 93 subjective flush reports was compared with activity during nonflush periods, and a discriminant function analysis was carried out. The Physiological Flush Profile (PFP), developed on the basis of these analyses, consists of peripheral vasodilation plus an increase in skin conductance (sternal and/or palmar), both of a specified magnitude. The PFP was shown to be both a specific and a sensitive measure of hot flushes. Notably, change in sternal skin conductance was highly positively correlated with subjective flush severity ratings. Potential applications of the PFP toward delineating the role of psychological factors in the reporting of menopausal symptomatology are discussed.
Biological Psychiatry | 1985
Douglas F. Levinson; Robert Edelberg; Hildegard R. Maricq
It has been suggested that the use of invalid scoring criteria might be responsible for the finding of excessive nonhabituation of the skin conductance orienting response (SCOR) in schizophrenia. Certain criteria may confuse SCOR and spontaneous SC activity in subjects with high rates of the latter (Levinson et al. 1984). To replicate this finding, data were reanalyzed from a study of 25 neuroleptic-free schizophrenic patients and 23 normal male subjects. Analysis of response latency and amplitude during a habituation paradigm of 11 78.5-dB tones confirmed the predictions. Broad scoring criteria (SCOR onset 1-5 sec poststimulus, and a three-no-response-trials habituation criterion) produced significantly different habituation scores than more restrictive criteria (1.6-3.0 sec latency window and a two-trials habituation criterion). Nonhabituation was scored in five patients and six normals by the former criteria, but in no patient and one normal by the latter. Nonhabituators, defined by using the broad criteria, had higher rates of spontaneous activity. The narrow latency window contained significantly more responses than could be explained by the spontaneous activity rate, but this was not true for the added time permitted by the broad window. It is concluded that the use of more restrictive scoring criteria may help to clarify the validity of SCOR nonresponse or hyporesponse as a marker for a type of schizophrenic illness.
Psychophysiology | 1981
Don C. Fowles; Margaret J. Christie; Robert Edelberg; William W. Grings; David T. Lykken; Peter H. Venables
Psychophysiology | 1985
Douglas F. Levinson; Robert Edelberg
Psychophysiology | 1972
Robert Edelberg
Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 1977
Robert Edelberg
Biological Psychiatry | 1984
Douglas F. Levinson; Robert Edelberg; Bridger Wh
Psychophysiology | 1990
Louis G. Tassinary; Thomas R. Geen; John T. Cacioppo; Robert Edelberg