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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Cardiorespiratory information dynamics during mental arithmetic and sustained attention
Devy WidjajaDaniele MarinazzoSabine Van HuffelAlessandro MontaltoLuca FaesElke Vlemincxsubject
Information TheoryBLOOD-PRESSUREAudiologyMedicine (all); Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology (all); Agricultural and Biological Sciences (all)ElectrocardiographyMedicine and Health SciencesHeart rate variabilityANXIETYAttentionVagal tonemedia_commoninformation theoryMultidisciplinaryHEART-RATE-VARIABILITYSISTARespirationMedicine (all)QRENTROPYHeartSignal Processing Computer-AssistedMedicineAnxietymedicine.symptomVigilance (psychology)Research ArticleDECOMPOSITIONmedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentSciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectINDEXESRESPIRATORY SINUS ARRHYTHMIAYoung AdultPSYCHOLOGICAL STRESSRespirationHeart rateWORK STRESSmedicineHumansPredictabilityBiochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology (all)Cardiorespiratory fitnessREACTIVITYattentionNonlinear DynamicsAgricultural and Biological Sciences (all)Settore ING-INF/06 - Bioingegneria Elettronica E InformaticaMathematicsStress Psychologicalcardiorespiratory dynamicsdescription
An analysis of cardiorespiratory dynamics during mental arithmetic, which induces stress, and sustained attention was conducted using information theory. The information storage and internal information of heart rate variability (HRV) were determined respectively as the self-entropy of the tachogram, and the self-entropy of the tachogram conditioned to the knowledge of respiration. The information transfer and cross information from respiration to HRV were assessed as the transfer and cross-entropy, both measures of cardiorespiratory coupling. These information-theoretic measures identified significant nonlinearities in the cardiorespiratory time series. Additionally, it was shown that, although mental stress is related to a reduction in vagal activity, no difference in cardiorespiratory coupling was found when several mental states (rest, mental stress, sustained attention) are compared. However, the self-entropy of HRV conditioned to respiration was very informative to study the predictability of RR interval series during mental tasks, and showed higher predictability during mental arithmetic compared to sustained attention or rest. ispartof: PLoS One vol:10 issue:6 ispartof: location:United States status: published
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2015-06-04 |