Title :
How much resting time is required before taking an ECG experiment?
Author :
Lee, Yaw-Chern ; Lee, Sung-Shine ; Zhang, Wen-Chih ; Shih, Yi-Shen ; Yang, Yi-Hsiang ; Shen, Hsuan ; Wu, Chi-Chang ; Sune, Shung-Ting ; Lee, Bor-Jen ; Huang, Sheng-Chieh
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Nat. Chiao Tung Univ., Hsinchu, Taiwan
Abstract :
Heart rate variability (HRV) is a wide-use and non-invasive method to access the status of autonomic nervous system (ANS) and circulation system. A resting stage (as the baseline) is often introduced before the experiment stimulus. There were 35 young healthy subjects in our experiments. We found that in a normal rest, people will calm down after ten minutes. The calm status can last for at least nine minutes. This statement is based on a statistical analysis in the intervals of participants´ heartbeats. We have the conclusion as follows. Before a psycho-physiological experiment designed, the suggested minimum resting time is ten-minute to make sure the participants are calmed down.
Keywords :
electrocardiography; medical signal processing; neurophysiology; ECG experiment; autonomic nervous system; circulation system; heart rate variability; heartbeats; noninvasive method; psychophysiological experiment design; resting time; statistical analysis; Autonomic nervous system; Cardiology; Electrocardiography; Frequency domain analysis; Hafnium; Heart rate variability; autonomic nervous system (ANS); electrocardiogram (ECG); heart rate (HR); heart rate variability (HRV); normal rest;
Conference_Titel :
Computer Symposium (ICS), 2010 International
Conference_Location :
Tainan
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-7639-8
DOI :
10.1109/COMPSYM.2010.5685394