International journal of psychophysiology : official journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology
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Int J Psychophysiol · Jan 2007
Comparative StudyAffective modulation of autonomic reactions to noxious stimulation.
Research suggests that emotion modulates spinal nociception and pain; however, there is limited evidence that other objective, nociceptive reactions are modulated. This study examined the impact of affective picture-viewing on autonomic reactions (skin conductance response, heart rate acceleration) resulting from noxious electric stimulations to the sural nerve. Pictures varying in affective valence (unpleasant, neutral, pleasant) were presented during which noxious stimulations were delivered. ⋯ Specifically, reactions were smaller during pleasant pictures than unpleasant pictures, although unpleasant pictures did not result in significant facilitation relative to neutral pictures. The valence linear trend explained 26% of the variance in the multivariate combination of the reactions, suggesting emotion does modulate autonomic reactions to nociception. These results suggest that SCR and HR acceleration are outcomes that can be assessed together with NFR and pain report during picture-viewing to study affective modulation of spinal (NFR), supraspinal (SCR, HR acceleration), and subjective (pain report) nociceptive reactions.
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Int J Psychophysiol · Jan 2007
The development of stop-signal and Go/Nogo response inhibition in children aged 7-12 years: performance and event-related potential indices.
The present study examined the development of response inhibition during the Stop-signal and Go/Nogo tasks in children using performance and ERP measures. Twenty-four children aged 7 to 12 years completed both tasks, each with an auditory Nogo/Stop-signal presented on 30% of trials. On average, response inhibition was more difficult in the Stop-signal than Go/Nogo task. ⋯ N1 and P3 amplitude in the parietal region increased with age for Stop-signals. An age-related reduction in P3 latency to Nogo stimuli correlated significantly with reduced RT and variability in Go responding, indicating a relationship between efficient Nogo and Go processing. Together the behavioural and ERP results suggest little development of the response inhibition process as measured via the Stop-signal and Go/Nogo tasks across the 7 to 12 year age range, while response execution processes develop substantially.
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Int J Psychophysiol · Jan 2007
Neuroticism-Anxiety, Impulsive-Sensation Seeking and autonomic responses to somatosensory stimuli.
This study focused on autonomic responding in participants who scored high vs. low on the Neuroticism-Anxiety (N-Anx) and Impulsive-Sensation Seeking (Imp-SS) dimensions of the Zuckerman-Kuhlman Personality Questionnaire--Form III. Participants were presented with series of tones (standards, deviants and novels) and they received a mild electric shock (one, two or three pulses) at each 15th tone. Resting pre-stimulus skin conductance level (SCL) and heart rate (HR) level was recorded, as well as the skin conductance response (SCR) and (anticipatory) HR response to the electric stimuli. ⋯ High Imp-SS had a lower pre-stimulus SCL and smaller SCRs to deviant stimuli compared to low Imp-SS participants. Additionally, their HR acceleration was smaller in anticipation of the first and the deviant tones whereas their deceleratory response was larger relative to the HR changes observed for the low Imp-SS participants. This pattern of findings was taken to suggest that high Imp-SS participants are more arousable and less prone to defensive reactions to novel or aversive stimulation.