@article { , title = {Positive illusions and its association with cardiovascular functions}, abstract = {The relationship between positive illusions (or self-enhancement) and cardiovascular functions was investigated using Asian samples in two studies. In phase 1 of Study 1, a generalized self-enhancement index was created for 241 participants using a paired word association memory task, a facial emotion recognition task, and a reading test. 122 participants subsequently volunteered for a second phase in this study where their ambulatory cardiovascular functions were measured throughout a single waking day. In Study 2, a priming procedure experimentally induced self-enhancement (n=35) and self-effacement (n=37) and the participants' cardiovascular arousal and perceived control for a mental arithmetic task were measured. Self-enhancement predicted lower cardiovascular functions for both studies. In Study 1, self-enhancement assessed at phase 2 was a significant predictor while self-enhancement measured at phase 1 was not. In Study 2, the relationship between self-enhancement and vascular reactivity was partially mediated by perceived control. The findings indicate that the relationship between self-enhancement and cardiovascular stress response, which has implications for cardiovascular health, (i) is relevant for Asian populations, (ii) is not just correlational but potentially causal, and (iii) is partly mediated by an increase in perceived control for vascular reactivity.}, doi = {10.1016/j.ijpsycho.2011.07.016}, eissn = {1872-7697}, issn = {0167-8760}, issue = {3}, journal = {International Journal Of Psychophysiology}, pages = {305-311}, publicationstatus = {Published}, publisher = {Elsevier}, url = {https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/471202}, volume = {81}, keyword = {Health and Health Inequalities, Physiology (medical), General Neuroscience, Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology}, year = {2011}, author = {Why, Yong Peng and Huang, Raymond Zhiwei} }