Do EEG and HRV indices discriminate between high-arousal and low-arousal positive affect?
EEG relative power is a viable physiological index for distinguishing between high- and low-arousal positive affect, whereas HRV is not.
Positive affect comprises distinct affective states that differ in arousal level, such as high-arousal positive affect (HAPA) and low-arousal positive affect (LAPA), which have been shown to be associated with different effects and effective contexts. In studies of positive affect, it is therefore important not only to assess overall positivity but also to distinguish between different types of positive affect. Existing assessments rely mainly on self-reports, which may be unreliable for individuals with limited self-report abilities. The aim of this study was to examine whether physiological indices can discriminate between HAPA and LAPA. Participants were presented with eight video stimuli designed to elicit either HAPA or LAPA, and self-report measures were used as manipulation checks to define the affective conditions, while heart rate variability (HRV) and electroencephalography (EEG) were recorded. HRV indices did not show significant differences between the two affective conditions. In contrast, analyses of EEG relative power revealed significant differences between the HAPA and LAPA conditions. These findings demonstrate that, under the present experimental conditions, physiological differences between low- and high-arousal positive affect can be captured in EEG signals using relative power, a simple and reproducible analytical index, whereas no such differences were observed in HRV indices.
Nakagawa et al. (Tue,) studied this question.