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Homeostatic Role of the Parasympathetic Nervous System in Human Behavior

Homeostatic Role of the Parasympathetic Nervous System in Human Behavior

9781608768042
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Description
It was recently proposed that respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) reflects the ability of the organism to integrate behavioural and metabolic demands, improving its homeostasis efficiency. Since the various anatomical and functional levels of the vagus nerve provide the conceptual basis of this allostatic model, it was designed under the name of the polyvagal theory. Therefore, altered RSA responses to various challenges could help to detect some dysfunctional states. The putative homeostatic roles of this vagal loop i.e., afferent and efferent pathways are reviewed here, in the domain of various psychological and behavioural homeostasis. Evaluation of the autonomic activity was issued from the temporal and frequency domain analyses of heart rate variability (HRV). For the purpose of preventing over-training, a heuristic sequential psychological and sympathovagal evolution is proposed, called the multistage psycho-autonomic model of adaptation to training (MPAMAT).
Product Details
73062
9781608768042
9781608768042

Data sheet

Publication date
2010
Issue number
1
Cover
paperback
Pages count
48
Dimensions (mm)
230.00 x 155.00
Weight (g)
128
  • Introduction; Parasympathetic activity & fatigue; Parasympathetic activity & chronic fatigue syndrome; Chronic fatigue syndrome & autonomic imbalance; Psychometric assessment of fatigue in CFS & relation with autonomic imbalance; Parasympathetic activity & overtraining; Overtraining syndrome & autonomic imbalance; Mood alterations & relation with autonomic imbalance; The multistage psychoautonomic model of adaptation to training; Parasympathetic nervous system & eating behavior; HRV as a method of assessing postprandial sympathovagal balance; Prandial pattern & the problem of meal definition; Cephalic phase reflexes; Cephalic phases reflexes:: roles & mechanisms; Cephalic phase of insulin release; Lipoprivic feeding; Putative role of the parasympathetic nerveux system in eating behavior:: the lessons of subdiaphragmatic vagal deafferentation; Portal glucose receptors, vagal afferents & eating behavior; Conclusion; Index.
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