University of Southern California, 3715 McClintock Avenue, Los Angeles, CA, 90089, USA.
Rutgers University, New Brunswick, USA.
Appl Psychophysiol Biofeedback. 2023 Mar;48(1):35-48. doi: 10.1007/s10484-022-09558-y. Epub 2022 Aug 28.
Previous research suggests that higher heart rate variability (HRV) is associated with better cognitive function. However, since most previous findings on the relationship between HRV and cognitive function were correlational in nature, it is unclear whether individual differences in HRV play a causal role in cognitive performance. To investigate whether there are causal relationships, we used a simple breathing manipulation that increases HRV through a 5-week HRV biofeedback intervention and examined whether this manipulation improves cognitive performance in younger and older adults (N = 165). The 5-week HRV biofeedback intervention did not significantly improve inhibitory control, working memory and processing speed across age groups. However, improvement in the Flanker score (a measure of inhibition) was associated with the amplitude of heart rate oscillations during practice sessions in the younger and older intervention groups. Our results suggest that daily practice to increase heart rate oscillations may improve inhibitory control, but future studies using longer intervention periods are warranted to replicate the present finding.
先前的研究表明,较高的心率变异性(HRV)与更好的认知功能相关。然而,由于之前关于 HRV 与认知功能之间关系的大多数发现本质上是相关的,因此尚不清楚 HRV 的个体差异是否在认知表现中起因果作用。为了研究是否存在因果关系,我们使用了一种简单的呼吸操作,通过 5 周的 HRV 生物反馈干预来增加 HRV,并观察这种操作是否能改善年轻和年长成年人的认知表现(N=165)。5 周的 HRV 生物反馈干预并没有显著改善不同年龄组的抑制控制、工作记忆和处理速度。然而,在年轻和年长的干预组中,在练习过程中心率波动幅度的改善与 Flanker 分数(一种抑制措施)的提高相关。我们的结果表明,每天练习增加心率波动可能会改善抑制控制,但需要进行更长干预期的未来研究来复制目前的发现。