Ryan M. Beveridge
University of Utah
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Featured researches published by Ryan M. Beveridge.
Health Psychology | 2008
Timothy W. Smith; Bert N. Uchino; Cynthia A. Berg; Paul Florsheim; Melissa Hawkins; Nancy J. M. Henry; Ryan M. Beveridge; Michelle Skinner; Paul N. Hopkins; Hyo Chun Yoon
OBJECTIVE Aspects of negative affect and social behavior studied as risk factors for coronary heart disease are usually examined separately and through self-reports. Using structural models of these personality domains, we tested associations of self-reports and spouse ratings of anxiety, depressive symptoms, anger, affiliation and dominance with coronary artery disease (CAD). DESIGN In 154 healthy older couples, the authors tested cross-sectional associations with CAD of three facets of negative affectivity and two dimensions of the Interpersonal Circumplex, (IPC) using scales derived from the NEO-PI-R. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES CAD was quantified as Agatston scores from CT scans of coronary artery calcification (CAC). RESULTS Self-reports were generally unrelated to CAC, whereas spouse ratings were consistently associated, largely independent of potential confounds. When considered simultaneously, anxiety and anger were related to CAC but depression was not. When considered together, both dominance and (low) affiliation were related to CAC. CONCLUSIONS Structural models of negative affectivity and social behavior can facilitate integrative study of psychosocial risk factors. Further, self-report measures of these traits might under-estimate related CHD risk.
Psychology and Aging | 2009
Timothy W. Smith; Bert N. Uchino; Cynthia A. Berg; Paul Florsheim; Melissa Hawkins; Nancy J. M. Henry; Ryan M. Beveridge; Michelle Skinner; Kelly J. Ko; Chrisanna Olsen-Cerny
Marital strain confers risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD), perhaps though cardiovascular reactivity (CVR) to stressful marital interactions. CVR to marital stressors may differ between middle-age and older adults, and types of marital interactions that evoke CVR may also differ across these age groups, as relationship contexts and stressors differ with age. The authors examined cardiovascular responses to a marital conflict discussion and collaborative problem solving in 300 middle-aged and older married couples. Marital conflict evoked greater increases in blood pressure, cardiac output, and cardiac sympathetic activation than did collaboration. Older couples displayed smaller heart rate responses to conflict than did middle-aged couples but larger blood pressure responses to collaboration-especially in older men. These effects were maintained during a posttask recovery period. Women did not display greater CVR than men on any measure or in either interaction context, though they did display greater parasympathetic withdrawal. CVR to marital conflict could contribute to the association of marital strain with CVD for middle-aged and older men and women, but other age-related marital contexts (e.g., collaboration among older couples) may also contribute to this mechanism.
Psychosomatic Medicine | 2011
Timothy W. Smith; Bert N. Uchino; Paul Florsheim; Cynthia A. Berg; Jonathan Butner; Melissa Hawkins; Nancy J. M. Henry; Ryan M. Beveridge; Paul N. Hopkins; Hyo Chun Yoon
Objective: To examine behavioral observations of affiliation (ie, warmth versus hostility) and control (ie, dominance versus submissiveness) and prior divorce as predictors of coronary artery calcification (CAC) in older couples. In some but not all studies, marital disruption and low marital quality have been shown to confer risk of coronary artery disease (CAD). Inconsistencies might reflect limitations of self-reports of marital quality compared with behavioral observations. Also, aspects of marital quality related to CAD might differ for men and women. Methods: Couples underwent computed tomography scans for CAC and marital assessments, including observations of laboratory-based disagreement. Participants were 154 couples (mean age, 63.5 years; mean length of marriage, 36.4 years) free of prior diagnosis of CAD. Results: Controlling traditional risk factors, we found behavioral measures of affiliation (low warmth) accounted for 6.2% of variance in CAC for women, p < .01, but not for men. Controlling behavior (dominance) accounted for 6.0% of variance in CAC for men, p < .02, but not for women. Behavioral measures were related to self-reports of marital quality, but the latter were unrelated to CAC. History of divorce predicted CAC for men and women. Conclusions: History of divorce and behavioral-but not self-report-measures of marital quality were related to CAD, such that low warmth and high dominance conferred risk for women and men, respectively. Prior research might underestimate the role of marital quality in CAD by relying on global self-reports of this risk factor.CAD = coronary artery disease; CAC = coronary artery calcification; CHD = coronary heart disease; IPC = interpersonal circumplex; MAP = mean arterial blood pressure; SASB = structural analysis of social behavior.
Psychology and Aging | 2011
Cynthia A. Berg; Ines Schindler; Timothy W. Smith; Michelle Skinner; Ryan M. Beveridge
Perceptions of cognitive compensation and interpersonal enjoyment of collaboration were examined in three hundred middle-aged and older couples who completed measures of perceptions of collaboration, cognitive ability, marital satisfaction, an errand task and judged their spouses affiliation. Older adults (especially men) endorsed cognitive compensation and interpersonal enjoyment and reported using collaboration more frequently than middle-aged adults. Greater need for cognitive compensation was related to lower cognitive ability only for older wives. Greater marital satisfaction was associated with greater interpersonal enjoyment. These two functions related to reports of more frequent use of collaboration and perceptions of spousal affiliation in a collaborative task.
Journal of Pediatric Psychology | 2005
Deborah J. Wiebe; Cynthia A. Berg; Carolyn D. Korbel; Debra L. Palmer; Ryan M. Beveridge; Renn Upchurch; Rob Lindsay; Michael T. Swinyard; David Donaldson
Journal of Pediatric Psychology | 2004
Debra L. Palmer; Cynthia A. Berg; Deborah J. Wiebe; Ryan M. Beveridge; Carolyn D. Korbel; Renn Upchurch; Michael T. Swinyard; Rob Lindsay; David Donaldson
Clinical Child and Family Psychology Review | 2007
Ryan M. Beveridge; Cynthia A. Berg
Psychology and Aging | 2007
T. Nathan Story; Cynthia A. Berg; Timothy W. Smith; Ryan M. Beveridge; Nancy J. M. Henry
Psychology and Aging | 2009
Timothy W. Smith; Cynthia A. Berg; Paul Florsheim; Bert N. Uchino; Melissa Hawkins; Nancy J. M. Henry; Ryan M. Beveridge; Michelle Skinner; Chrisanna Olsen-Cerny
Journal of Pediatric Psychology | 2006
Ryan M. Beveridge; Cynthia A. Berg; Deborah J. Wiebe; Debra L. Palmer