This Week In HRV - Episode 31

This Week In HRV - Episode 31

This week’s edition of This Week in HRV dives into ten fresh studies that illustrate how heart rate variability is being used to decode everything from the heat of the climate to the heat of a high-stakes police encounter. We explore how HRV acts as a mediator for pain, a predictor of cognitive decline in extreme temperatures, and even a marker for the "acute effects" of professional gaming.

1. The Gateway of Fear: HRV, Pain, and Perception

A study in the Journal of Clinical Medicine by Venezia et al. explored the psychological architecture of pain. Researchers investigated whether our physiological "braking system" (HRV) explains why people who fear pain actually feel it more intensely.

  • Key Findings: The study found that HRV significantly mediates the relationship between a person’s "Fear of Pain" and their actual "Pain Perception." Essentially, a more flexible autonomic nervous system can buffer the impact of fear on the physical experience of pain.

  • Significance: This suggests that improving autonomic regulation isn't just about heart health; it’s a viable strategy for chronic pain management and desensitization.

  • Study Link: View Article

2. Impulsivity and the Bottle: Alcohol Cue-Induced HRV

Published in Addictive Behaviors Reports, Taniajura and colleagues looked at "cue-reactivity"—how the body responds to the sight or smell of alcohol—and how impulsivity plays a role in drinking behavior.

  • Key Findings: The research identified a specific link between alcohol-cue-induced HRV changes and subsequent drinking, particularly in individuals with high impulsivity.

  • Significance: HRV may serve as a real-time "relapse warning system," identifying moments when an individual’s self-regulation is compromised by environmental triggers.

  • Study Link: View Article

3. Cognitive Performance in the Heat: 150 Minutes of Stress

As global temperatures rise, understanding heat-induced cognitive fatigue is critical. Zhu et al. published a study in Energy and Buildings focusing on human attentional performance during sustained heat exposure.

  • Key Findings: Using HRV indices, researchers predicted shifts in human attention and performance after 150 minutes of heat exposure.

  • Significance: This provides a blueprint for "smart buildings" and occupational safety protocols that use wearable HRV data to prevent heat-related errors in industrial settings.

  • Study Link: View Article

4. Protecting the Frontline: HRV in Agricultural Workers

In a parallel vein to the study above, Lung et al. (published in Nature) utilized lightweight personal sensors to track agricultural workers in the field.

  • Key Findings: The study validated an "innovative method" for evaluating the immediate impact of environmental heat on the autonomic nervous system of outdoor laborers.

  • Significance: This moves HRV research out of the lab and into the "real world," proving that mobile sensors can effectively monitor the health of vulnerable populations in extreme climates.

  • Study Link: View Article

5. Inside the Heart: HRV in the Operating Room

A study in Frontiers in Physiology by Skoczyński et al. took HRV into the most acu...

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Ana Miranda Talks Heart Rate Variability and Allostatic Load

Ana Miranda Talks Heart Rate Variability and Allostatic Load

In this episode, Matt Bennett interviews Ana Miranda about her research on HRV, allostatic load, and the stress response.

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This Week In HRV - Episode 28

This Week In HRV - Episode 28

In this week’s episode of The Heart Rate Variability Podcast: This Week in HRV Edition, we explore seven newly published studies that highlight the remarkable breadth of heart rate variability researc...

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This Week In HRV - Episode 27

This Week In HRV - Episode 27

In this week’s episode, host Matt Bennett explores the expanding frontier of heart rate variability as a bridge between subjective stress, neural adaptability, physiological arousal, and early cogniti...

3 Mars 20min

Dr. Inna Khazan Different Options to get the Most of HRV Biofeedback

Dr. Inna Khazan Different Options to get the Most of HRV Biofeedback

In this episode, Matt Bennett interviews Dr. Inna Khazan about how people can use different options to maximize their biofeedback practice.

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This Week In HRV - Episode 26

This Week In HRV - Episode 26

In this week’s episode, host Matt Bennett moves beyond environmental stressors to explore the biological architecture that governs our autonomic responses. From the inflammatory milieu of coronary art...

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This Week In HRV - Episode 25

This Week In HRV - Episode 25

In this week’s episode of The Heart Rate Variability Podcast: This Week in HRV Edition, we explore five new studies that highlight the remarkable breadth of heart rate variability research — from the ...

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Dr. Tommy Rhee's Innovative Approach to Regenerative Health

Dr. Tommy Rhee's Innovative Approach to Regenerative Health

In this episode, Matt Bennett interviews chiropractor Dr. Tommy Rhee about his utilization of heart rate variability in his innovative approach to regenerative health, recovery, and performance.

12 Feb 55min

This Week In HRV - Episode 24

This Week In HRV - Episode 24

In Episode 24 of the Heart Rate Variability Podcast, we explore five recent studies that span trauma recovery, personality theory, migraine prediction, heart failure monitoring, and fundamental vagal ...

10 Feb 11min

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