| Literature DB >> 30042653 |
Sylvain Laborde1,2, Emma Mosley3,4, Alina Mertgen5.
Abstract
The aim of this paper is to set the stage for the vagal tank theory, showcasing a functional resource account for self-regulation. The vagal tank theory, building on neurophysiological, cognitive and social psychology approaches, will introduce a physiological indicator for self-regulation that has mainly been ignored from cognitive and social psychology, cardiac vagal control (also referred to as cardiac vagal activity). Cardiac vagal control reflects the contribution of the vagus nerve, the main nerve of the parasympathetic nervous system, to cardiac regulation. We propose cardiac vagal control to be an indicator of how efficiently self-regulatory resources are mobilized and used. Three systematic levels of cardiac vagal control analysis are suggested: resting, reactivity, and recovery. Based on this physiological indicator we derive the metaphor of the vagal tank, which can get depleted and replenished. Overall, the vagal tank theory will enable to integrate previous findings from different disciplines and to stimulate new research questions, predictions, and designs regarding self-regulation.Entities:
Keywords: HF; RMSSD; RSA; executive functions; heart rate variability; parasympathetic activity; self-control; vagal tone
Year: 2018 PMID: 30042653 PMCID: PMC6048243 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2018.00458
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
Summary of the predictions of the vagal tank theory, based on the three Rs (Resting, Reactivity, Recovery).
| Three Rs | Specification | Prediction | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Adaptation level | Resting | “The higher the better”: Better self-regulation with higher resting cardiac vagal control | |
| Reactivity | Situation requires a low level of physical activity and relies mainly on executive functioning | Better self-regulation with smaller cardiac vagal control decrease (or in some cases cardiac vagal control increase) | |
| Situation requires a high level of physical activity | Better self-regulation with larger cardiac vagal control decrease | ||
| Recovery | Cardiac vagal control decreased during the event | The faster cardiac vagal control level comes back to initial level, the better the self-regulation | |
| Cardiac vagal control increased during the event | The longer cardiac vagal control stays above initial resting level, the better the self-regulation | ||
| Interaction patterns | Resting-Reactivity | A higher resting cardiac vagal control predicts a better self-regulation during reactivity | |
| Resting-Recovery | A higher resting cardiac vagal control predicts a better self-regulation during recovery | ||
| Reactivity-Recovery | A more adaptive cardiac vagal control reactivity associated to a more adaptive recovery predicts a better self-regulation than when only either the reactivity or the recovery is adaptive |