Publication: Physiological Arousal, Distress Tolerance, and Social Problem-solving Deficits Among Adolescent Self-injurers
Date
2008
Authors
Published Version
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
American Psychological Association
The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you.
Citation
Nock, Matthew K., and Wendy B. Mendes. 2008. Physiological arousal, distress tolerance, and social problem-solving deficits among adolescent self-injurers. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology 76(1): 28-38.
Research Data
Abstract
It has been suggested that people engage in nonsuicidal self-injury (NSSI) because they (a) experience heightened physiological arousal following stressful events and use NSSI to regulate experienced distress and (b) have deficits in their social problem-solving skills that interfere with the performance of more adaptive social responses. However, objective physiological and behavioral data supporting this model are lacking. The authors compared adolescent self-injurers (n = 62) with noninjurers (n = 30) and found that self-injurers showed higher physiological reactivity (skin conductance) during a distressing task, a poorer ability to tolerate this distress, and deficits in several social problem-solving abilities. These findings highlight the importance of attending to increased arousal, distress tolerance, and problem-solving skills in the assessment and treatment of NSSI.
Description
Other Available Sources
Keywords
problem solving, distress tolerance, physiological arousal, self-mutilation, self-harm
Terms of Use
Metadata Only