Search results for "Psychophysiology"

showing 10 items of 44 documents

Acute effects of psychological relaxation techniques between two physical tasks.

2016

The concept of recovery strategies includes various ways to achieve a state of well-being, prevent underrecovery syndromes from occurring and re-establish pre-performance states. A systematic application of individualised relaxation techniques is one of those. Following a counterbalanced cross-over design, 27 sport science students (age 25.22 ± 1.08 years; sports participation 8.08 ± 3.92 h/week) were randomly assigned to series of progressive muscle relaxation, systematic breathing, power nap, yoga, and a control condition. Once a week, over the course of five weeks, their repeated sprint ability was tested. Tests (6 sprints of 4 s each with 20 s breaks between them) were executed on a non…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyRelaxationmedicine.medical_treatmentSports scienceMuscle RelaxationRestPhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and RehabilitationAthletic PerformanceRelaxation TherapyBreathing ExercisesRunning03 medical and health sciencesYoung Adult0302 clinical medicinePhysical medicine and rehabilitationmedicineHumansOrthopedics and Sports MedicineTreadmillMuscle SkeletalProgressive muscle relaxationRelaxation (psychology)Yoga030229 sport sciencesMuscle relaxationMeditationSprintBreathingPhysical therapyExercise TestPhysical EnduranceFemaleRelaxation TherapyPsychologySleephuman activities030217 neurology & neurosurgeryStress PsychologicalPsychophysiologyJournal of sports sciences
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Effects of voluntary changes in breathing frequency on respiratory comfort

1998

Previous experiments on voluntary breathing have suggested that spontaneous breathing is partly determined by the minimization of respiratory sensations. However, during instructed breathing, respiratory sensations may be confounded with difficulty in achieving the prescribed pattern. In the present experiment, we tested the hypothesis that the subjective assessment of respiratory comfort and the difficulty in following breathing instructions are closely related. A total of 15 subjects adjusted breathing frequency to prescribed values ranging from 40 to 250% of individual spontaneous levels. Then, they scored the difficulty of this task and the discomfort associated with the target frequenc…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyRespiratory rateAudiologySensationmedicineHumansAttentionRespiratory systemWork of BreathingCommunicationbusiness.industryRespirationGeneral NeuroscienceBiofeedback PsychologyNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyControl of respirationTurnoverSignificant positive correlationBreathingFemaleArousalPulmonary VentilationPsychologybusinessPsychophysiologyBiological Psychology
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Temporal relationship between nocturnal erections and rapid eye movement episodes in healthy men.

2003

The exact temporal relationship between spontaneous nocturnal erections and rapid eye movement (REM) sleep was studied in healthy men with the aim of creating a basis for a more sophisticated analysis of nocturnal erection measurements in physiological research and clinical applications. The vast majority of erectile events was coupled to REM episodes, where the latency between the beginning of erections and REM episodes showed a large variability. Moreover, a correlation analysis revealed a highly significant decrease of the latency over the course of the night. The time variant properties of the coupling between erections and REM sleep point to more complex dynamics of the central control…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtymedia_common.quotation_subjectPolysomnographyRapid eye movement sleepSleep REMPolysomnographyNocturnalPhysical medicine and rehabilitationInternal medicinemedicineReaction TimeHumansBiological Psychiatrymedia_commonmedicine.diagnostic_testmusculoskeletal neural and ocular physiologyPenile ErectionEye movementElectroencephalographyMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseCircadian RhythmPsychiatry and Mental healthNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyPsychophysiologyEndocrinologyErectile dysfunctionCorrelation analysisPsychologycirculatory and respiratory physiologyVigilance (psychology)PsychophysiologyNeuropsychobiology
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Electrodermal and phasic heart rate responses in the Guilty Actions Test: comparing guilty examinees to informed and uninformed innocents.

2007

The present mock-crime study concentrated on the validity of the Guilty Actions Test (GAT) and the role of the orienting response (OR) for differential autonomic responding. N=105 female subjects were assigned to one of three groups: a guilty group, members of which committed a mock-theft; an innocent-aware group, members of which witnessed the theft; and an innocent-unaware group. A GAT consisting of ten question sets was administered while measuring electrodermal and heart rate (HR) responses. For informed participants (guilty and innocent-aware), relevant items were accompanied by larger skin conductance responses and heart rate decelerations whereas irrelevant items elicited HR accelera…

Adultmedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentFeedback PsychologicalAudiologyNeuropsychological TestsDevelopmental psychologyOrienting responseElectrocardiographyHeart RatePhysiology (medical)Heart ratemedicineHumansHabituationHabituation PsychophysiologicAgedCriminal PsychologyAnalysis of VarianceGeneral NeuroscienceReproducibility of ResultsGalvanic Skin ResponseMiddle AgedTest (assessment)Neuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyPsychophysiologyROC CurveGuiltFemaleAnalysis of varianceSkin conductancePsychologyInternational journal of psychophysiology : official journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology
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Anticipatory effects of food exposure in women diagnosed with bulimia nervosa.

2002

Objective. To investigate cephalic phase responses (CPRs) in women diagnosed with bulimia nervosa and to test the assumption that eating disordered individuals respond with more marked CPRs and higher increases in psychophysiological arousal to the presentation of food cues. Method. Thirteen female inpatients diagnosed with bulimia nervosa were compared to 15 non-eating disordered female volunteers. Participants were exposed to their preferred binge food in a single laboratory session with the possibility to eat immediately after the exposure trial. Results. The results show greater salivation responses to food exposure and lower sympathetic arousal in patients diagnosed with bulimia nervos…

Adultmedicine.medical_specialtyHydrocortisonemedia_common.quotation_subjectBlood Pressurebehavioral disciplines and activitiesChoice BehaviorArousalHeart Ratemental disordersmedicineHumansBulimiaPsychiatryGeneral Psychologymedia_commonNutrition and DieteticsBinge eatingBulimia nervosadigestive oral and skin physiologyCase-control studyCephalic phasemedicine.diseaseDistressPsychophysiologyFeelingCase-Control StudiesFemalemedicine.symptomCuesPsychologyArousalSalivationPsychophysiologyAppetite
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Cooperation Between Strangers in Face-to-Face Dyads Produces More Cardiovascular Activation Than Competition or Working Alone

2019

Abstract. Individual and shared goals can be achieved through social interpersonal interaction, cooperation and competition being two different yet similar strategies to reach such aims and objectives. Nevertheless, there is a gap in the literature analyzing the effect of these types of social interactions, especially in cooperation, on autonomic nervous system responses using noninvasive measures, such as heart rate (HR). The regulation of HR and other cardiovascular variables of the central nervous system offers information about how to encourage or discourage social engagement and prosocial behaviors. In fact, a more flexible engagement with the environment and efficient emotions regula…

Competition (economics)Face-to-faceNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyPsychophysiologyProsocial behaviorPhysiologyGeneral NeuroscienceControl (management)Social engagementPsychologySet (psychology)Social psychologySocial relationJournal of Psychophysiology
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The phantoms of the opera—Stress offstage and stress onstage

2021

During opera performance singers deliver vocally demanding roles, follow a conductor, portray emotions of a musical work, act, dance, and engage with costumes, sets and props before an audience. Hence, opera performance is a stressful experience. This study examined different types of stress experiences by measuring the trajectories of 10 opera trainees’ heart rate variability (HRV) during two performances, covering onstage and offstage periods. We explored connections between HRV, self-reported stress measures, and expert-rated difficulty of the performed roles. We discovered that opera trainees had lower HRV and thus experienced greater physiological stress, while onstage compared to off…

DanceOpera05 social sciences06 humanities and the artsMusical050105 experimental psychology060404 musicVisual artsPsychophysiologyStress (linguistics)0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPsychology (miscellaneous)Psychology0604 artsMusicPsychology of Music
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Heart rate variability and self-control—A meta-analysis

2015

Heart rate variability (HRV) has been suggested as a biological correlate of self-control. Whereas many studies found a relationship between HRV at rest and self-control, effect sizes vary substantially across studies in magnitude and direction. This meta-analysis evaluated the association between HRV at rest and self-control in laboratory tasks, with a particular focus on the identification of moderating factors (task characteristics, methodological aspects of HRV assessment, demographics). Overall, 24 articles with 26 studies and 132 effects (n=2317, mean age=22.44, range 18.4-57.8) were integrated (random effects model with robust variance estimation). We found a positive average effect …

Demographicsmedia_common.quotation_subjectStatistics as TopicModels Psychological050105 experimental psychologySelf-ControlElectrocardiography03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineHeart RateStatisticsVariance estimationHumansMedicineHeart rate variability0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesmedia_commonbusiness.industryGeneral Neuroscience05 social sciencesSignal Processing Computer-AssistedMean agePublication biasSelf-controlRandom effects modelNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyMeta-analysisFemaleArousalbusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgeryPsychophysiologyBiological Psychology
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Quantifying multidimensional control mechanisms of cardiovascular dynamics during multiple concurrent stressors

2021

Heartbeat regulation is achieved through different routes originating from central autonomic network sources, as well as peripheral control mechanisms. While previous studies successfully characterized cardiovascular regulatory mechanisms during a single stressor, to the best of our knowledge, a combination of multiple concurrent elicitations leading to the activation of different autonomic regulatory routes has not been investigated yet. Therefore, in this study, we propose a novel modeling framework for the quantification of heartbeat regulatory mechanisms driven by different neural routes. The framework is evaluated using two heartbeat datasets gathered from healthy subjects undergoing p…

HeartbeatTilt testComputer scienceCold pressor test0206 medical engineeringEmotionsBiomedical Engineering02 engineering and technologyStressAutonomic Nervous SystemCardiovascular System030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging03 medical and health sciencesNeural activity0302 clinical medicineHeart RateHumansCentral autonomic networkCardiac controlControl (linguistics)Heart rate variabilityStressorEmotion elicitationHealthy subjectsCognitionHeart020601 biomedical engineeringComputer Science ApplicationsPsychophysiologyCentral autonomic network; Cold pressor test; Emotion elicitation; Heart rate variability; Stress; Tilt test; Autonomic Nervous System; Emotions; Heart; Heart Rate; Humans; Cardiovascular SystemSettore ING-INF/06 - Bioingegneria Elettronica E InformaticaCentral autonomic network Cold pressor test Emotion elicitation Heart rate variability Stress Tilt testNeuroscience
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Psychophysiology of developmental dyslexia: a review of findings including studies of children at risk for dyslexia

2005

Abstract Brain imaging results illustrative of the search for neuronal markers of dyslexia are reviewed. Event-related potentials (ERPs) are shown to be effective indices of auditory processes involved in speech perception and thus, apparently also helpful in uncovering the neuronal basis of language problems associated with difficulties in reading. Results from the authors' laboratory show that, even at a very early age, brain responses (ERPs) to speech sounds can differentiate children with and without risk for dyslexia and also show reliable predictive correlations to later language development and reading acquisition. The review also covers dyslexia research in which other brain imaging…

Linguistics and LanguageSpeech perceptionCognitive Neurosciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectDyslexiaExperimental and Cognitive Psychologymedicine.diseasebehavioral disciplines and activitiesBiological theories of dyslexiaLanguage developmentPsychophysiologyArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)NeuroimagingReading (process)medicineDyslexia researchPsychologypsychological phenomena and processesmedia_commonCognitive psychologyJournal of Neurolinguistics
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