Decrement of the skin conductance response to repeated volitional inspiration

To examine response decrement of the recently reported inspiratory skin conductance response (SCR) [Lim CL, Seto-Poon M, Clouston PD, Morris JG. Sudomotor nerve conduction velocity and central processing time of the skin conductance response. Clin Neurophysiol 2003;114:2172–80]. Twelve healthy adult...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical neurophysiology 2005-05, Vol.116 (5), p.1172-1180
Hauptverfasser: Seto-Poon, Margaret, Madronio, Melanie, Kirkness, Jason P., Amis, Terence C., Byth, Karen, Lim, Chong Lee
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:To examine response decrement of the recently reported inspiratory skin conductance response (SCR) [Lim CL, Seto-Poon M, Clouston PD, Morris JG. Sudomotor nerve conduction velocity and central processing time of the skin conductance response. Clin Neurophysiol 2003;114:2172–80]. Twelve healthy adult volunteers performed 3 tasks (A) a control task of maintaining tidal breathing and then two randomized tasks, (B) a deep inspiration to a target oral pressure and (C) tapping with a finger. Each task was performed 30 times on cue every 20 s in 3 runs with 5 min of rest between runs. The SCR, oral pressure, airflow, inspired volume and cue signal were recorded continuously and analysed offline. SCR amplitude was logarithmically transformed and then statistically analysed, using a linear mixed effects model, as a function of run number, trial number and absolute error between target and actual oral pressures. Inspiratory efforts elicited exponentially decreasing SCR amplitude with increasing trial number during each run ( P
ISSN:1388-2457
1872-8952
DOI:10.1016/j.clinph.2004.12.001