Institute of HeartMath, Boulder Creek CA, USA.
Department of Psychology, Brenau University Gainesville, GA, USA.
Front Psychol. 2014 Sep 29;5:1090. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2014.01090. eCollection 2014.
The ability to alter one's emotional responses is central to overall well-being and to effectively meeting the demands of life. One of the chief symptoms of events such as trauma, that overwhelm our capacities to successfully handle and adapt to them, is a shift in our internal baseline reference such that there ensues a repetitive activation of the traumatic event. This can result in high vigilance and over-sensitivity to environmental signals which are reflected in inappropriate emotional responses and autonomic nervous system dynamics. In this article we discuss the perspective that one's ability to self-regulate the quality of feeling and emotion of one's moment-to-moment experience is intimately tied to our physiology, and the reciprocal interactions among physiological, cognitive, and emotional systems. These interactions form the basis of information processing networks in which communication between systems occurs through the generation and transmission of rhythms and patterns of activity. Our discussion emphasizes the communication pathways between the heart and brain, as well as how these are related to cognitive and emotional function and self-regulatory capacity. We discuss the hypothesis that self-induced positive emotions increase the coherence in bodily processes, which is reflected in the pattern of the heart's rhythm. This shift in the heart rhythm in turn plays an important role in facilitating higher cognitive functions, creating emotional stability and facilitating states of calm. Over time, this establishes a new inner-baseline reference, a type of implicit memory that organizes perception, feelings, and behavior. Without establishing a new baseline reference, people are at risk of getting "stuck" in familiar, yet unhealthy emotional and behavioral patterns and living their lives through the automatic filters of past familiar or traumatic experience.
改变情绪反应的能力是整体健康的核心,也是有效应对生活需求的关键。创伤等事件的主要症状之一是,我们的内部基准参考发生了变化,以至于创伤事件会反复被激活。这可能导致我们对环境信号高度警惕和过度敏感,表现为不适当的情绪反应和自主神经系统动态。在本文中,我们讨论了这样一种观点,即一个人自我调节其当下体验的感觉和情绪质量的能力与我们的生理密切相关,以及生理、认知和情感系统之间的相互作用。这些相互作用构成了信息处理网络的基础,系统之间通过节律和活动模式的产生和传递进行通信。我们的讨论强调了心脏和大脑之间的通信途径,以及它们如何与认知和情绪功能以及自我调节能力相关。我们讨论了这样一种假设,即自我诱导的积极情绪会增加身体过程的一致性,这反映在心脏节律的模式中。这种心脏节律的转变反过来又在促进更高的认知功能、创造情绪稳定和促进平静状态方面发挥着重要作用。随着时间的推移,这会建立一个新的内部基准参考,这是一种组织感知、感觉和行为的内隐记忆。如果不建立新的基准参考,人们就有可能陷入熟悉但不健康的情绪和行为模式,并通过过去熟悉或创伤性经历的自动过滤来生活。