The impact of evaluative observation on cardiovascular
reactivity and adaptation to recurrent psychological stress
was evaluated in 162 undergraduate men and women. All participants
performed three mental arithmetic tasks with or without
evaluative observation. Impedance cardiographic, blood
pressure, task performance, and stress appraisal measures
were recorded for each task. Evaluative observation moderated
the effects of task repetition on cardiac reactivity but
not vascular reactivity. The introduction of evaluative
observation disrupted cardiac adaptation, resulting in
a resurgence of β-adrenergic cardiac reactivity (p
< .005), whereas the removal of evaluative observation
promoted cardiac adaptation. Evaluative observation also
increased stress appraisals and slowed task performance.
The results support the dual process theory of habituation,
rather than stimulus comparator theory, but only partially
support cognitive appraisal theory.