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Emotionality and Heart Rate

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Title: Emotionality and Heart Rate


1
Emotionality and Heart Rate
  • Greg Richards

2
(No Transcript)
3
The Heart
  • The heart is a four chambered organ.
  • It Supplies blood with nutriments and oxygen to
    the tissues of the body as its main function.
  • The four chambers are the right and left atria
    which are on the top and the right and left
    ventricles which are on the bottom.
  • The ventricles pump the blood to the lungs and
    the rest of the body.
  • The atria are the chambers that gets the blood
    that comes back to the heart from the veins.

4
The Heart (contd)
  • The right atrium receives blood from everything
    but the lungs.
  • There are three veins that bring blood to the
    right atrium
  • The superior vena cava brings the blood from the
    upper body.
  • The interior vena cava brings the blood from the
    lower body.
  • The coronary sinus blood brings the blood from
    the heart.
  • Through the pulmonary artery blood goes from the
    right atrium to the right ventricle and then to
    the lungs.
  • Oxygen is then added to the blood and carbon
    dioxide is removed.
  • Through the pulmonary veins the blood goes back
    to the left atrium.
  • Then the blood travels to the left ventricle and
    then is pumped to the rest of the body through
    the aorta.

5
Electrocardiogram (ECG)
  • The average human heart beats 72 times per minute
    and a little over 100,000 times per day.
  • ECG is used to measure heart activity.
  • It looks at whether the heart is functioning
    normally or if it has any abnormalities.
  • Abnormalities could be skipped or extra
    heartbeats.
  • Can show previous damage to the heart muscle,
    like a heart attack.
  • It can detect conduction abnormalities and also
    give information on the physical condition of the
    heart.

6
ECG (contd)
  • When the heart contracts some of the electrical
    impulse spreads to the surface of the body.
  • With this, when electrodes are then placed on the
    skin the electrical potentials can be recorded.
  • These electrical potentials in the heart are
    recorded by the electrocardiograph.
  • The electrocardiogram is the resulting
    measurement when these electrical potentials are
    amplified and recorded.

7
ECG (contd)
  • Willem Eintoven studied the electrical changes
    that occur when the heart contracts.
  • Eintoven invented the string galvanmeter in 1901
    which he used to study these electrical changes.
  • This device was quick enough to look at currents
    produced by the heart that were small and very
    rapid.
  • Eintoven won the Nobel Prize in Medicine in 1924
    for his discovery.

8
ECG Leads
  • There are a few normal leads for ECG recordings.
  • Normal electrocardiograms are recorded from three
    leads
  • Lead 1, the electrodes are attached from the
    right to the left arm.
  • Lead 2, the electrodes are attached from the
    right arm to the left leg.
  • Lead 3, the electrodes are attached from the left
    arm to the right leg.

9
Wave forms in ECG
  • The waves in normal ECG were referred to as
    P,Q,R,S and T waves.
  • An ECG tracing of a normal heartbeat has a P
    wave, a QRS complex, and a T wave.
  • The P wave is small, and is produced by
    electrical currents.
  • These currents occur right before atrial
    contraction.
  • This is when the left and right atria contract at
    the same time.
  • The QRS complex is caused by currents right
    before contraction of the right and left
    ventricles.

10
Wave forms in ECG (contd)
  • The R wave is the most important wave in the QRS
    complex.
  • The R and S waves show contraction of the
    myocardium.
  • The T wave shows repolarization of the
    ventricles.
  • The T wave is usually positive, but when negative
    it can be a sign of disease.

11
ECG
  • The electrocardiogram has become very familiar
    with the general population it has come to
    signify strength and importance.

12
Heart Activity, Attention, and the Orienting
Response
13
Attention and the Body
  • Attention refers to the act of focusing awareness
    on some aspect of stimulus situation
  • Physiological changes accompany attention
  • Heart rate slows briefly either before an
    expected event or following a significant, but
    unexpected occurrence

14
Studies
  • Jennings (1986)-situational characteristics that
    influence hear rate
  • significance of the event to the person
  • estimate of event occurrence must be fairly
    precise
  • when anticipation ends deceleration stops
  • detection difficulty enhances deceleration
  • Found that decrease in heart rate is an indicator
    of initiation and termination of attention state
  • Jennings capacity hypothesis HR deceleration
    indexes the holding of available capacity to
    perform mental operations on extended input
  • Also HR acceleration indicates that processing
    capacity is allocated to ongoing mental and motor
    activities.

15
Studies
  • Depascalis Barry and Sparita (1995)
  • Notion that HR deceleration reflects
    preparation that facilitate the intake of stimuli
    rather than response preparation
  • Using a fixed period task that involved
    recognition of stimuli were able to find HR
    decreases in the time before the target stimulus
    and even greater decreases just before the onset
    of a signal that gave feedback about the
    subjects performance.
  • Heart rate deceleration expresses stimulus
    processing rather than preparation to respond.

16
Studies
  • Lacey Lacey (1980)
  • The decrease in heart rate enhances receptivity
    to new stimuli and improves response
    effectiveness
  • Graham (1979)
  • Interpreted Cardiac deceleration mainly in terms
    of enhancing the the input of stimuli
  • Orbist (1981)
  • Emphasized the decrease in motor activity that
    accompanies heart rate deceleration- heart rate
    is not a direct effect of attention, but an
    indirect result of quieting of motor
    activity-Incase of stimulus intake the drop in HR
    reflects the general somatic quieting observed
    in that kind of situation.

17
Studies
  • Graham and Clifton (1966)
  • Using the hypothesis of Sokolov and Lacey on
    cardiac acceleration as a OR to a novel stimuli.
  • Concluded that the OR response was accompanied by
    HR deceleration and that HR acceleration
    represents defense reaction to stimuli of pre
    pain intensity.
  • Raskin Kotses Bever(1969)
  • Experiment 30 male subjects receiving .5 secs of
    white noise at each level of stimulation- found
    that at 80-dB stimulus was interpreted as
    representing the OR whereas acceleration to the
    120-dB refelected a defensive reaction.

18
Sleep
  • Taylor Moldofsky and Furedy (1985)
  • Hypothesized that if eye bursts during REM sleep
    represent orientation to dream content then HR
    deceleration should occur
  • Found that decelerations preceded eye bursts in
    REM sleep. There is suggestive evidence that
    dream intensity is high during eye burst periods

19
Unpleasant Stimulation
  • Hare (1972)
  • Gave slides of homocide victims to 49 college
    students to study HR response to unpleasant
    stimulation.
  • 3 different types of responses, 9 showed
    acceleration, 12 showed deceleration, and the
    remaining 28 showed moderate deceleration
  • Results support OR consists of hear rate
    deceleration and that the DR consists of Heart
    rate acceleration

20
Spiders
  • Hare (1973)
  • Follow up study used Arachnophobia in study of 20
    subjects,10 who feared spiders and 10 who did not
  • Subjects with spider fears had HR acceleration
    when viewing slides of spiders and those without
    showed deceleration
  • Type of stimuli and the intensity are key factors
    when doing work with the OR and DR

21
  • Eves and Gruzelier (1984)
  • Individual differences in response to high
    intensity tones (112dB-127dB)
  • Initial Heart acceleration increased in one group
    but did not increase in another group of subjects
    showing differences in responses to certain
    stimuli
  • Found that HR deceleration is associated with the
    OR and stimulus intake, whereas HR acceleration
    accompanies the DR and stimulus rejection

22
Studies
  • Spence Lugo and Youdin (1972)
  • Study of persons listening to continuous verbal
    text found a decrease in Hr when they directed
    their attention to external stimuli
  • Found congruence with the notion that attention
    to external stimuli results in cardiac
    deceleration

23
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24
  • Ekman, Levenson, and Frieson (1983)
  • -examined HR in association with facial
    expressions of various emotions such as fear,
    anger, disgust, sadness, happiness, and surprise.
  • -participants were told exactly what muscles to
    contrast in order to create the appropriate
    facial expressions for each emotion
  • -The results showed a greater change of HR with
    anger, fear, and sadness then with happiness and
    surprise.
  • -Ekman concluded that voluntary contractions of
    facial muscles into expressions of emotion
    produced different physiological patters.

25
  • Ekman, Levenson, and Friesen (1990)
  • -conducted four different follow up experiments
    that yielded the following results
  • voluntary production of facially expressed
    emotions produced self-reports of that emotion
  • there were physiological differences among the
    negative emotions of anger, disgust, fear, and
    sadness and positive emotions of happiness and
    surprise ( there was a larger increase of HR for
    anger, fear and sadness compared to disgust and
    surprise

26
Frustration and Fear
  • Rule and Hewitt (1971)
  • -participants were asked to learn lists of verbal
    materials during sessions in which verbal
    reinforcement was provided by a peer
  • -the participants were put into three different
    groups a difficult list of verbal materials with
    neutral comments, an easy list of verbal
    materials with neutral comments, and a difficult
    list of verbal materials with derogatory comments
  • -the last condition, difficult list and
    derogatory comments, was considered high arousal
    because it involved both frustration and insult,
    where as the first two conditions were considered
    low arousal because it was only frustrating
  • -the conditions did not differ in HR during
    learning sessions. However, they were allowed to
    administer electric shock to their peers who
    reviewed them and during this time only the large
    arousal condition showed an increase in HR

27
  • Klorman, Wiesenfeld, and Austin (1975)
  • -participants HRs were measured while
    participants viewed fearful or neutral stimuli
  • -they classified 32 women as either high or low
    in fear of mutilation
  • -the subjects were then shown neutral photos
    (photographic poses), mutilation photos (burn and
    accident victims), and bizarre photos (a bald man
    with lemons attached to his ears).
  • -the fearful subjects showed increases HR to
    mutilation slides, whereas the low-fear
    participants showed HR deceleration. While both
    neutral photos and bizarre photos showed HR
    deceleration.
  • -Individual differences will determine whether HR
    will accelerate or decelerate in reaction to fear
    stimuli

28
Reaction Time
  • Lacey and Lacey (1977)
  • -examined HR as a function of what time an
    imperative stimulus was presented in the cardiac
    cycle
  • -they found the magnitude of HR deceleration
    depended on where in the cardiac cycle the
    signal was presentedif it occurred early (4th
    decile in the cycle) deceleration was much
    greater then if the signal came late (10th
    decile)
  • -the Laceys attributed the HR deceleration to
    the action of the vagus nerve

29
  • Survillo (1971)
  • -measured HR and RT of 100 healthy males in three
    different sessions
  • -stimuli occurred at random times while
    participants HR and RT was measured
  • -cardiac deceleration to stimuli was not observed
    under these conditions
  • -the study indicated that HR slowing and RT were
    unrelated when stimuli were presented without
    regularity

30
  • HR deceleration occurs during the fixed fore
    period of an RT task
  • When an RT task is performed under conditions in
    which HR is extremely manipulated, or without
    fixed fore period there is no HR deceleration
    prior to the response or directly after
  • Unmanipulated HR deceleration is found in
    individuals who expect a significant stimulus
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