Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring was used to
investigate the cardiovascular correlates of naturally
occurring interpersonal interactions. Participants were
New York City traffic agents, who routinely engage in conflict-prone
communication with the public under relatively fixed conditions.
Talking with the public, supervisors, or coworkers was
associated with levels of systolic and diastolic blood
pressure and heart rate that exceeded a resting baseline.
Blood pressure was higher when agents were talking to the
public than when they were talking to coworkers or engaged
in a noncommunicative work task. Systolic blood pressure
response during communication was associated with the agent's
mood. Blood pressure effects associated with communication
appear to persist after the communication has ceased. Implications
of these data for the reactivity hypothesis of the pathogenesis
of cardiovascular disease are discussed.