A power nap cycle demonstrated a profound decoupling between linear heart rate and non-linear very low frequency (VLF) oscillations (r = -0.12), with VLF surging significantly post-awakening.
Observational (n=6)
No
Does a power nap alter the relationship between heart rate and the very low frequency component of heart rate variability in healthy adults?
The very low frequency component of heart rate variability acts as an early indicator of physiological recovery and arousal during a power nap, demonstrating a decoupling from linear heart rate changes.
Estimación del efecto: r = -0.12
Objective:This exploratory study investigates the relationship between heart rate (HR) and the very low frequency (VLF) component of heart rate variability (HRV) during a power nap. While HR is commonly used as a linear indicator of physiological state, we hypothesize that VLF captures non-linear autonomic dynamics that are not reflected in heart rate alone. Methods: Physiological data were collected from six healthy adults (3 males, 3 females) using wearable ECG sensors. Three 5-minute segments were analyzed for each participant: pre-sleep, sleep/nap, and post-awakening. Frequency-domain HRV indices were calculated, and statistical analyses included Pearson’s correlation coefficient and Cohen’s d to evaluate linear relationships and effect sizes. Results: A negligible correlation was observed between HR and VLF (r = − 0.12, R² = 0.014), indicating that heart rate explains only 1.4% of the variance in VLF power. During the post-awakening phase, VLF power showed a pronounced surge (exceeding 10,000 ms² in some cases), despite relatively stable HR, suggesting a rapid autonomic “reboot.” Gender comparisons revealed small effect sizes for mean HR (d = 0.21) and VLF (d = 0.08); however, males exhibited substantially greater HR variability than females, indicating differences in autonomic stability rather than mean activity. Conclusion: These findings demonstrate a clear decoupling between linear heart rate and non-linear autonomic oscillations during a power nap cycle. VLF appears to act as an early indicator of physiological recovery and arousal, whereas HR reflects a delayed or saturated response. Frequency-domain HRV analysis, particularly VLF, is therefore essential for assessing recovery quality in short-term nap interventions, where linear metrics alone fail to capture underlying autonomic complexity.
Morikawa et al. (Thu,) conducted a observational in Healthy adults (n=6). Power nap vs. Pre-sleep and Sleep/Nap phases was evaluated on Correlation between Heart Rate (HR) and Very Low Frequency (VLF) power (r = -0.12). A power nap cycle demonstrated a profound decoupling between linear heart rate and non-linear very low frequency (VLF) oscillations (r = -0.12), with VLF surging significantly post-awakening.