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The redistribution of power: neurocardiac signaling, alcohol and gender
Authors:Bates Marsha E  Buckman Jennifer F  Vaschillo Evgeny G  Fonoberov Vladimir A  Fonoberova Maria  Vaschillo Bronya  Mun Eun-Young  Mezić Adriana  Mezić Igor
Institution:1Center of Alcohol Studies, Rutgers – The State University of New Jersey, Piscataway, New Jersey, United States of America;2AIMdyn, Inc., Santa Barbara, California, United States of America;3Center for Control, Dynamical Systems and Computation, University of California Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California, United States of America;University of Cincinnati, United States of America
Abstract:Human adaptability involves interconnected biological and psychological control processes that determine how successful we are in meeting internal and environmental challenges. Heart rate variability (HRV), the variability in consecutive R-wave to R-wave intervals (RRI) of the electrocardiogram, captures synergy between the brain and cardiovascular control systems that modulate adaptive responding. Here we introduce a qualitatively new dimension of adaptive change in HRV quantified as a redistribution of spectral power by applying the Wasserstein distance with exponent 1 metric (W(1)) to RRI spectral data. We further derived a new index, D, to specify the direction of spectral redistribution and clarify physiological interpretation. We examined gender differences in real time RRI spectral power response to alcohol, placebo and visual cue challenges. Adaptive changes were observed as changes in power of the various spectral frequency bands (i.e., standard frequency domain HRV indices) and, during both placebo and alcohol intoxication challenges, as changes in the structure (shape) of the RRI spectrum, with a redistribution towards lower frequency oscillations. The overall conclusions from the present study are that the RRI spectrum is capable of a fluid and highly flexible response, even when oscillations (and thus activity at the sinoatrial node) are pharmacologically suppressed, and that low frequency oscillations serve a crucial but less studied role in physical and mental health.
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