Decelerative changes in heart rate during recognition of visual stimuli: effects of psychological stress.

The present study investigated whether the anticipatory heart rate (HR) deceleration response may reflect a pre-attentive process of stimulus registration and how reaction time (RT) and HR responses are influenced by the introduction of a psychological stressor. 60 subjects participated in a signalled RT task with a feedback stimulus containing information on their reaction time and accuracy. Changes in HR, skin conductance (SC) and respiration activity were monitored during performance in two conditions of a visual stimulus recognition task with a fixed foreperiod. In one condition subjects were informed that some electric shocks would be delivered to their right wrist (stress condition); in the other, subjects were simply engaged in the stimulus recognition without the stressor (no-stress condition). Stimuli consisted of geometrical figures and for each trial subjects were required to determine whether a probe stimulus was the same as or different from one of two memory items. Two reliable anticipatory HR decelerations, one preceding the imperative stimulus and the other preceding the feedback signal, were observed. Because the HR deceleration preceding the feedback signal (that did not require the inhibition of any specific motor response) was more pronounced than that obtained for the probe stimulus, it was concluded that HR deceleration response is an expression of stimulus processing rather than response preparation. Reaction times for 'same' stimuli were shorter than for 'different' stimuli. Averaged respiratory activity showed that with the onset of a warning signal subjects inspired and held their breath until they received the feedback signal. The averaged skin conductance data showed two main phasic increases, one after the probe stimulus onset and the other after the delivery of the feedback signal. This was taken to reflect the orienting response to the most significant stimuli.

[1]  D I Boomsma,et al.  Does the heart know what the eye sees? A cardiac/pupillometric analysis of motor preparation and response execution. , 1989, Psychophysiology.

[2]  A. Sanders Towards a model of stress and human performance. , 1983, Acta psychologica.

[3]  M. W. van der Molen,et al.  Response inhibition initiates cardiac deceleration: evidence from a sensory-motor compatibility paradigm. , 1991, Psychophysiology.

[4]  M. W. van der Molen,et al.  On the shift from anticipatory heart rate deceleration to acceleratory recovery: revisiting the role of response factors. , 1990, Psychophysiology.

[5]  Walter Schneider,et al.  Controlled and Automatic Human Information Processing: 1. Detection, Search, and Attention. , 1977 .

[6]  C. Sandman,et al.  Heart rate and cardiac phase influences on visual perception. , 1977, Journal of comparative and physiological psychology.

[7]  P. Obrist Cardiovascular Differentiation of Sensory Stimuli , 1963, Psychosomatic medicine.

[8]  M. Coles,et al.  Energetics and Human Information Processing , 1986 .

[9]  P. Venables,et al.  Publication recommendations for electrodermal measurements. , 1981 .

[10]  T. Cox,et al.  An inventory for the measurement of self-reported stress and arousal. , 1978, The British journal of social and clinical psychology.

[11]  J. Jennings,et al.  Is it important that the mind is in a body? Inhibition and the heart. , 1992, Psychophysiology.

[12]  T. McCanne,et al.  Decelerative changes in heart rate are associated with performance on tasks that assess intelligence. , 1990, International journal of psychophysiology : official journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology.

[13]  E. N. Sokolov,et al.  Perception and the Conditioned Reflex , 1965 .

[14]  D. McCloskey,et al.  Cardiovascular and respiratory responses to changes in central command during isometric exercise at constant muscle tension , 1972, The Journal of physiology.

[15]  G. R. J. Hockey A State Control Theory of Adaptation and Individual Differences in Stress Management , 1986 .

[16]  Beatrice C. Lacey,et al.  Studies of heart rate and other bodily processes in sensorimotor behavior. , 1974 .

[17]  E. Donchin,et al.  Psychophysiology : systems, processes, and applications , 1987 .

[18]  D. Kahneman,et al.  Attention and Effort , 1973 .

[19]  Raja Parasuraman,et al.  Varieties of attention , 1984 .

[20]  M. Eysenck Attention And Arousal, Cognition And Performance , 1982 .

[21]  R. Barry Preliminary processes in O-R elicitation ☆ , 1984 .

[22]  M G Coles,et al.  Cardiac and respiratory activity during visual search. , 1972, Journal of experimental psychology.

[23]  Robert W. Proctor,et al.  A unified theory for matching-task phenomena. , 1981 .

[24]  B. C. Lacey,et al.  10 – SOME AUTONOMIC-CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM INTERRELATIONSHIPS , 1970 .

[25]  H. J. Eysenck,et al.  Advances in psychophysiology: J.R. Jennings, P.K. Ackles & M.G.H. Coles (Eds) Vol.5 (1993).320 pp. £42.50 (hardback). ISBN 185302 191 1 , 1994 .

[26]  D. Hebb Drives and the C.N.S. (conceptual nervous system). , 1955, Psychological review.

[27]  N. A. Coulter,et al.  Respiratory sinus arrhythmia: a frequency dependent phenomenon , 1964 .

[28]  G Vossel,et al.  Individual differences in resting heart rate and spontaneous electrodermal activity as predictors of attentional processes: effects on anticipatory heart rate deceleration and task performance. , 1990, International journal of psychophysiology : official journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology.

[29]  Donald E. Broadbent,et al.  Decision and stress , 1971 .

[30]  C. Sandman,et al.  Physiological patterns accompanying complex problem solving during warning and nonwarning conditions. , 1975, Journal of comparative and physiological psychology.

[31]  T. McCanne,et al.  Autonomic and somatic responses associated with performance of the Embedded Figures Test. , 1979, Psychophysiology.

[32]  Gijsbertus Mulder,et al.  Psychophysiology of cardiovascular control : models, methods, and data , 1985 .

[33]  A. Longoni,et al.  Problems in the Assessment of Hand Preference , 1985, Cortex.

[34]  John A. Stern,et al.  Psychophysiological perspectives : festschrift for Beatrice and John Lacey , 1984 .

[35]  J. Hirsch,et al.  Respiratory sinus arrhythmia in humans: how breathing pattern modulates heart rate. , 1981, The American journal of physiology.