Paradoxical effect of cumulative stress exposure on information processing speed in Hispanics/Latinos with elevated heart rate variability
Roger C. McIntosh
1
,
Tasneem Khambaty
2
,
M M Llabre
1
,
Krista M. Perreira
3
,
Hector M. González
4
,
Mayank M Kansal
5
,
Wassim Tarraf
6
,
NEIL SCHNEIDERMAN
1
3
Department of Social Medicine, UNC at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill 27599, United States of America
|
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2021-06-01
scimago Q1
wos Q2
SJR: 0.948
CiteScore: 5.4
Impact factor: 2.6
ISSN: 01678760, 18727697
PubMed ID:
33524438
General Neuroscience
Physiology (medical)
Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology
Abstract
Chronic stress has a deleterious effect on prefrontal lobe functioning. Empirical evidence suggests elevated vagal tone, indexed by elevated heart rate variability (HRV), mitigates the effect of mental stress on frontal lobe function. Here, the mitigating effect of HRV on stress-related decrements in cognitive performance is assessed based on information processing speed (DSST), word fluency and verbal learning task performance. Artifact free electrocardiogram (ECG) data was analyzed from 1420 Hispanic/Latino adults from the Sociocultural Ancillary of the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos (HCHS/SOL). A 12-lead ECG was used to collect short-term recordings of the root mean square of successive differences in all normal R-peak to R-peak intervals (RMSSD) and the change between adjacent beats and the standard deviation of those intervals (SDNN) as indices of total HRV. As predicted, an interaction emerged for HRV and stress on the task presumed to require the greatest prefrontal lobe involvement, i.e., the DSST. After accounting for sociodemographic factors, chronic stress was associated with better DSST performance amongst individuals at higher quartile of SDNN, but not RMSSD. The paradoxical effect for greater stress exposure on DSST performance may in part be explained by increased speed of information processing and decision making often reported in high-stress cohorts. The nature of this interaction highlights the importance of examining the relationship between stress and cognition across a spectrum of vagal tone.
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Total citations:
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Citations from 2024:
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(66.67%)
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McIntosh R. C. et al. Paradoxical effect of cumulative stress exposure on information processing speed in Hispanics/Latinos with elevated heart rate variability // International Journal of Psychophysiology. 2021. Vol. 164. pp. 1-8.
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McIntosh R. C., Khambaty T., Llabre M. M., Perreira K. M., González H. M., Kansal M. M., Tarraf W., SCHNEIDERMAN N. Paradoxical effect of cumulative stress exposure on information processing speed in Hispanics/Latinos with elevated heart rate variability // International Journal of Psychophysiology. 2021. Vol. 164. pp. 1-8.
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RIS
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TY - JOUR
DO - 10.1016/j.ijpsycho.2021.01.019
UR - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpsycho.2021.01.019
TI - Paradoxical effect of cumulative stress exposure on information processing speed in Hispanics/Latinos with elevated heart rate variability
T2 - International Journal of Psychophysiology
AU - McIntosh, Roger C.
AU - Khambaty, Tasneem
AU - Llabre, M M
AU - Perreira, Krista M.
AU - González, Hector M.
AU - Kansal, Mayank M
AU - Tarraf, Wassim
AU - SCHNEIDERMAN, NEIL
PY - 2021
DA - 2021/06/01
PB - Elsevier
SP - 1-8
VL - 164
PMID - 33524438
SN - 0167-8760
SN - 1872-7697
ER -
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BibTex (up to 50 authors)
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@article{2021_McIntosh,
author = {Roger C. McIntosh and Tasneem Khambaty and M M Llabre and Krista M. Perreira and Hector M. González and Mayank M Kansal and Wassim Tarraf and NEIL SCHNEIDERMAN},
title = {Paradoxical effect of cumulative stress exposure on information processing speed in Hispanics/Latinos with elevated heart rate variability},
journal = {International Journal of Psychophysiology},
year = {2021},
volume = {164},
publisher = {Elsevier},
month = {jun},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpsycho.2021.01.019},
pages = {1--8},
doi = {10.1016/j.ijpsycho.2021.01.019}
}