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Effects of Posture and Stimulus Spectral Composition on Peripheral Physiological Responses to Loud Sounds

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2016

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Public Library of Science
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Koch, Jennifer, Jan Flemming, Thomas Zeffiro, Michael Rufer, Scott P. Orr, and Christoph Mueller-Pfeiffer. 2016. “Effects of Posture and Stimulus Spectral Composition on Peripheral Physiological Responses to Loud Sounds.” PLoS ONE 11 (9): e0161237. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0161237. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0161237.

Abstract

In the “loud-tone” procedure, a series of brief, loud, pure-tone stimuli are presented in a task-free situation. It is an established paradigm for measuring autonomic sensitization in posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Successful use of this procedure during fMRI requires elicitation of brain responses that have sufficient signal-noise ratios when recorded in a supine, rather than sitting, position. We investigated the modulating effects of posture and stimulus spectral composition on peripheral psychophysiological responses to loud sounds. Healthy subjects (N = 24) weekly engaged in a loud-tone-like procedure that presented 500 msec, 95 dB sound pressure level, pure-tone or white-noise stimuli, either while sitting or supine and while peripheral physiological responses were recorded. Heart rate, skin conductance, and eye blink electromyographic responses were larger to white-noise than pure-tone stimuli (p’s < 0.001, generalized eta squared 0.073–0.076). Psychophysiological responses to the stimuli were similar in the sitting and supine position (p’s ≥ 0.082). Presenting white noise, rather than pure-tone, stimuli may improve the detection sensitivity of the neural concomitants of heightened autonomic responses by generating larger responses. Recording in the supine position appears to have little or no impact on psychophysiological response magnitudes to the auditory stimuli.

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Bioassays and Physiological Analysis, Electrophysiological Techniques, Muscle Electrophysiology, Electromyography, Engineering and Technology, Signal Processing, White Noise, Medicine and Health Sciences, Mental Health and Psychiatry, Neuropsychiatric Disorders, Anxiety Disorders, Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, Neuroses, Biology and Life Sciences, Neuroscience, Brain Mapping, Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Diagnostic Medicine, Diagnostic Radiology, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Imaging Techniques, Radiology and Imaging, Neuroimaging, Physical Sciences, Physics, Acoustics, Sound Pressure, Physiology, Sensory Physiology, Anatomy, Head, Eyes, Ocular System, Background Noise (Acoustics)

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