scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Cardiac deceleration and reaction time: an evaluation of two hypotheses

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
Evidence is considered to indicate that heart rate deceleration may not be significantly involved in an afferent mechanism but rather can be best understood as a peripheral manifestation of central processes.
Abstract
The purpose of this experiment was to evaluate two hypotheses concerning the basis of the association between performance on a simple reaction time (RT) task and the deceleration of heart rate found as the S responds. The RT task consisted of 96 trials in which the foreperiod was randomly varied between 2, 4, 8, and 16 sec. Two groups of 31 Ss each were used, with the cardiac response blocked pharmacologically in one group, in order to determine if the occurrence of the cardiac response facilitated performance through an afferent feedback mechanism. Two aspects of somatic activity, EMG bursts from chin muscles and eye movements and blinks, were also assessed in order to determine if the cardiac response and the associated behavioral facilitative effects were linked to a common mediating process involving cardiac deceleration and the inhibition of ongoing, task-irrelevant somatic activities. The latter hypothesis was consistently supported. Blocking the cardiac response did not significantly influence performance. However, a within-S analysis revealed a pronounced direct relationship between RT and the magnitude of the inhibition of somatic effects and the magnitude of the cardiac deceleration when the latter was not blocked pharmacologically. These data along with several other lines of evidence are considered to indicate that heart rate deceleration may not be significantly involved in an afferent mechanism but rather can be best understood as a peripheral manifestation of central processes.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Arousal, activation, and effort in the control of attention

TL;DR: This review attempts to organize a range of neuropsychological and psycho-physiological data on attention by identifying three basic at-tentional control processes: one regulates arousal resulting from input; a second controls the preparatory activation of response mechanisms; and a third operates to coordinate arousal and activation, an operation that demands effort.
Journal ArticleDOI

The three arousal model: implications of gray's two-factor learning theory for heart rate, electrodermal activity, and psychopathy.

TL;DR: It is possible to relate the clinical features of psychopathy to the psychophysiological data with the single assumption that primary psychopaths have a deficient BIS, but they suffer from poor passive avoidance and extinction with reduced EDA in response to threatening stimuli.
Journal ArticleDOI

Relation of sympathy and personal distress to prosocial behavior: a multimethod study.

TL;DR: Heart rate deceleration during exposure to the needy others was associated with increased willingness to help, and adults' reports of sympathy, as well as facial sadness and concerned attention, were positively related to their intention to assist.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Cardiovascular-Behavioral Interaction—As It Appears Today

TL;DR: Emerging evidence suggests that with passive coping such as classical aversive conditioning, the heart is more under vagal control which is directionally linked with somatic activity, while blood pressure is more dominated by vascular processes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Controllability and human stress: Method, evidence and theory

TL;DR: A Minimax hypothesis is proposed: When individuals control aversive events, they believe relief to be caused by a stable source—their own response, which entails that maximum future danger will be minimized.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The cardiac-somatic relationship: some reformulations.

TL;DR: It is proposed that heart rate most unequivocally reflects vagal activity, while the contractile properties of the heart manifest most unequivocally sympathetic effects.
Journal ArticleDOI

Heart rate and somatic changes during aversive conditioning and a simple reaction time task

TL;DR: Evidence was provided that the basis for the spontaneous EMG bursts may be related to somatic responses elsewhere in the body, such as postural adjustments, and to be directly correlated with reaction time.
Journal ArticleDOI

Interaction between the visual evoked response and two spontaneous biological rhythms: the eeg alpha cycle and the cardiac arousal cycle.

TL;DR: The interaction between two spontaneous biological rhythms and the visual evoked response is described, and renewed interest in the possibility that photic stimuli might have quite different effects depending upon alpha phase at stimulation can be justified.