How heart rate variability affects emotion regulation brain networks

•Breathing at a 10-s (.1Hz) rate typically increases amplitude of heart rate oscillations.•Daily practice increasing heart rate oscillations improves emotional well-being.•Physiological oscillations stimulate oscillatory activity in brain regions involved in emotion regulation.•Slow (∼.1Hz) oscillat...

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Veröffentlicht in:Current opinion in behavioral sciences 2018-02, Vol.19, p.98-104
Hauptverfasser: Mather, Mara, Thayer, Julian F
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description •Breathing at a 10-s (.1Hz) rate typically increases amplitude of heart rate oscillations.•Daily practice increasing heart rate oscillations improves emotional well-being.•Physiological oscillations stimulate oscillatory activity in brain regions involved in emotion regulation.•Slow (∼.1Hz) oscillations can also modulate interactions among faster neural frequencies.•Heart rate oscillations thereby have potential to strengthen regulatory brain networks. Individuals with high heart rate variability tend to have better emotional well-being than those with low heart rate variability, but the mechanisms of this association are not yet clear. In this paper, we propose the novel hypothesis that by inducing oscillatory activity in the brain, high amplitude oscillations in heart rate enhance functional connectivity in brain networks associated with emotion regulation. Recent studies using daily biofeedback sessions to increase the amplitude of heart rate oscillations suggest that high amplitude physiological oscillations have a causal impact on emotional well-being. Because blood flow timing helps determine brain network structure and function, slow oscillations in heart rate have the potential to strengthen brain network dynamics, especially in medial prefrontal regulatory regions that are particularly sensitive to physiological oscillations.
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