On 2017 Mar 19, Paul Grossman commented:
Unfortunately, the authors of this paper so far refuse to discuss key most likely severely flawed assumptions of their "recommendations" paper in any open forum available to scientists (here, ResearchGate or PubMed Commons: see their reply to my qnd others's comments in ResearchGate, https://www.researchgate.net/publication/313849201_Heart_Rate_Variability_and_Cardiac_Vagal_Tone_in_Psychophysiological_Research_Recommendations_for_Experiment_Planning_Data_Analysis_and_Data_Reporting )
I have been active in this field for over 30 years. Vagal tone is not "variability in heart rate between inhalation and exhalation"; the latter is termed respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA, or also high-frequency heart-rate variability, HRV ) and under very specific conditions may sometimes partially reflect, or be a marker of, cardiac vagal tone. Cardiac vagal tone--on the other hand--is defined as the magnitude of mean heart rate change from one condition to another (e.g. rest to different levels of physical exertion or to pharmacological blockade of parasympathetic control) that is a specific consequence of parasympathetic effects. Obviously the two phenomena are not equivalent: Resipratory sinus arrhythmia is an inherently phasic (not tonic) phenomenon (heart rate shifting rhythmically from inspiration to expiration). Cardiac vagal tone characterizes the average effect of vagal influences upon heart rate during a particular duration of time. Changes in breathing frequency can have dramatic effects upon magnitude of RSA without any effects upon cardiac vagal tone. There are also other conditions in which the two phenomena do not change proportionally to each other: e.g. sometimes when sympathetic activity substantially changes; or when efferent vagal traffic to the heart is blocked by chemicals before it can reach the sinus atrial node; or probably when vagal discharge is so great that the vagal traffic saturates the sinus atrial node leading to profound slowing of heart rate during both inspiration and expiration. These effects are rather clearly shown in the autonomic cardiovascular physiological literature but fail to be acknowledged in much of the psychological or psychophysiological publications. Thus it is plain wrong to believe that RSA is vagal tone. There is really so much evidence that is often systematically ignored, particularly by psychologists working in the field.
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