High-Frequency Heart Rate Variability and Emotion-Driven Impulse Control Difficulties During Adolescence: Examining Experienced and Expressed Negative Emotion as Moderators.
Stefanie F GonçalvesTara M ChaplinRoberto LópezIrene M RegalarioClaire E NiehausPatrick E McKnightMatthew Stults-KolehmainenRajita SinhaEmily B AnsellPublished in: The Journal of early adolescence (2020)
Emotion-driven impulse control difficulties are associated with negative psychological outcomes. Extant research suggests that high frequency heart rate variability (HF-HRV) may be indicative of emotion-driven impulse control difficulties and potentially moderated by negative emotion. In the current study, 248 eleven- to 14-year-olds and their parent engaged in a negatively emotionally arousing conflict task at Time 1. Adolescents' HF-HRV and negative emotional expression and experience were assessed before, during, and/or after the task. Adolescents reported on their levels of emotion-driven impulse control difficulties at Time 1 and one year later. Results revealed that higher levels of HF-HRV reactivity (i.e., higher HF-HRV augmentation) predicted higher levels of emotion-driven impulse control difficulties one year later among adolescents who experienced higher negative emotion. These findings suggest that negative emotional context should be considered when examining HF-HRV reactivity as a risk factor for emotion-driven impulse control difficulties and associated outcomes.
Keyphrases
- high frequency
- heart rate variability
- depressive symptoms
- autism spectrum disorder
- borderline personality disorder
- transcranial magnetic stimulation
- heart rate
- young adults
- physical activity
- acute heart failure
- poor prognosis
- heart failure
- metabolic syndrome
- type diabetes
- single cell
- insulin resistance
- binding protein