Learned Cardiac Control with Heart Rate Biofeedback Transfers to Emotional Reactions

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Abstract

Emotions involve subjective feelings, action tendencies and physiological reactions. Earlier findings suggest that biofeedback might provide a way to regulate the physiological components of emotions. The present study investigates if learned heart rate regulation with biofeedback transfers to emotional situations without biofeedback. First, participants learned to decrease heart rate using biofeedback. Then, inter-individual differences in the acquired skill predicted how well they could decrease heart rate reactivity when later exposed to negative arousing pictures without biofeedback. These findings suggest that (i) short lasting biofeedback training improves heart rate regulation and (ii) the learned ability transfers to emotion challenging situations without biofeedback. Thus, heart rate biofeedback training may enable regulation of bodily aspects of emotion also when feedback is not available. © 2013 Peira et al.

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APA

Peira, N., Pourtois, G., & Fredrikson, M. (2013). Learned Cardiac Control with Heart Rate Biofeedback Transfers to Emotional Reactions. PLoS ONE, 8(7). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0070004

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