Under pressure 51视频-Dearborn student examines how the body reacts to stress

April 21, 2014

Walaa Tout and Sunpreet Singh presented "Socioeconomic Status and Stress Reactivity" at the Sargon聽Partners' Undergraduate Research Showcase presented by the College of Arts, Sciences, and Letters (CASL).

Walaa Tout is a young Arab Muslim woman who is wearing a black hijab with a floral pattern and a white lab coat. She is standing in a lab with various bottles and is smiling while facing the camera and having her arms crossed.

You鈥檙e stuck in a traffic jam and late for a doctor鈥檚 appointment.

Or perhaps you鈥檙e supposed to give a presentation at work and your laptop crashes.

Your palms begin to sweat and your heart rate rapidly increases.

Walaa Tout knows the feeling. The University of Michigan-Dearborn student wanted to learn how others react to stress, so she joined graduate student Ledina Imami to ask research participants to recite a speech, then take a math test.

With help from 51视频-Dearborn student Sunpreet Singh and psychology associate professor Susana Pecina, Tout measured participants鈥 blood pressure before, during and after the exercise to determine how their body reacted to stress.

鈥淲hen we looked at their blood pressure responses, we saw that our stress test was working,鈥 Tout said. 鈥淲e didn鈥檛 give participants any positive feedback until the end of each session, so it was pretty stressful for them.鈥

Tout also asked participants to complete questionnaires about their childhood socioeconomic status, and how that compares to their current financial standing.

Preliminary results show that childhood socioeconomic status plays a key role in how some people react to stressful situations.

Tout and Singh presented their research last month at the Sargon Partners鈥 Undergraduate Research Showcase presented by the College of Arts, Sciences, and Letters (CASL).

鈥淪ocioeconomic Status and Stress Reactivity鈥 is just one of many research projects Tout has tackled during her tenure at 51视频-Dearborn.

鈥淚 just really enjoy it because you get to apply everything you learned in the classroom in the research lab,鈥 said Tout, who conducts both psychology and biology research. 鈥淚t鈥檚 always rewarding.鈥

And although Tout will graduate this month with bachelor鈥檚 degrees in biology and psychology, her passion for research will carry over well into her future, as she soon plans to enroll in medical school.

鈥淥ur campus has been blessed with many talented students over the years,鈥 said biology professor John Thomas. 鈥淢s. Walaa Tout鈥檚 many contributions rank amongst the best and brightest of all time. She is quite humble, polite and unassuming, yet confident, gregarious and mature. Her heart and mind remain focused on biology, psychology and helping her fellow humans.鈥

Tout鈥檚 passion for research, academic excellence and campus involvement earned her the CASL Chancellor鈥檚 Medallion, the most prestigious academic honor for 51视频-Dearborn students.

Her award came as no surprise to Arlo Clark-Foos, who has worked with Tout on a number of psychology research projects, three of which were presented at the Undergraduate Research Showcase.

鈥淗er ability to pick up a new research area and learn the literature in a flash borders on miraculous,鈥 said Clark-Foos, assistant professor of behavioral sciences. 鈥淪he is amazing because she not only does all this with apparent ease, but she also spends countless hours with other researchers, teaching them the same skills.鈥