A mixed assessment battery in 37 infants revealed strong positive co-variation between heart rate, head velocity, and peripheral accelerometry, with the strongest patterns at 40s epoch durations.
Cohort (n=37)
In 12-month-old infants, autonomic indices like heart rate and motor activity show strong covariation, suggesting motor activity may serve as a good proxy for autonomic nervous system activity.
Tonic and phasic differences in peripheral autonomic nervous system (ANS) indicators strongly predict differences in attention and emotion regulation in developmental populations. However, virtually all previous research has been based on individual ANS measures, which poses a variety of conceptual and methodlogical challenges to comparing results across studies. Here we recorded heart rate, electrodermal activity (EDA), pupil size, head movement velocity and peripheral accelerometry concurrently while a cohort of 37 typical 12-month-old infants completed a mixed assessment battery lasting approximately 20 min per participant. We analysed covariation of these autonomic indices in three ways: first, tonic (baseline) arousal; second, co-variation in spontaneous (phasic) changes during testing; third, phasic co-variation relative to an external stimulus event. We found that heart rate, head velocity and peripheral accelerometry showed strong positive co-variation across all three analyses. EDA showed no co-variation in tonic activity levels but did show phasic positive co-variation with other measures, that appeared limited to sections of high but not low general arousal. Tonic pupil size showed significant positive covariation, but phasic pupil changes were inconsistent. We conclude that: (i) there is high covariation between autonomic indices in infants, but that EDA may only be sensitive at extreme arousal levels, (ii) that tonic pupil size covaries with other indices, but does not show predicted patterns of phasic change and (iii) that motor activity appears to be a good proxy measure of ANS activity. The strongest patterns of covariation were observed using epoch durations of 40s per epoch, although significant covariation between indices was also observed using shorter epochs (1 and 5s).
Wass et al. (Mon,) conducted a cohort in Healthy infants (n=37). Mixed assessment battery was evaluated on Co-variation of autonomic indices (tonic, spontaneous phasic, and stimulus-relative phasic). A mixed assessment battery in 37 infants revealed strong positive co-variation between heart rate, head velocity, and peripheral accelerometry, with the strongest patterns at 40s epoch durations.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: