Summary
Contents
Subject index
The field of health psychology has exploded in the last decade due to progress identifying physiological mechanisms by which psychological, social, and behavioral factors can put people's health and well-being at risk. The Handbook of Physiological Research Methods in Health Psychology provides thorough, state-of-the-art, and user-friendly coverage of basic techniques for measurement of physiological variables in health psychology research. It is designed to serve as a primary reference source for researchers and students interested in expanding their research to consider a biopsychosocial approach. Chapters addressing key physiological measures have been written by international experts with an eye towards documenting essential information that must be considered in order to accurately and reliably measure biological samples. The book is not intended to be a lab manual of specific biomedical techniques, nor is it intended to provide extensive physiological or anatomical information. Rather, it takes the approach most useful for a non-specialist who seeks guidance on how and when to collect biological measures but who will have the actual samples assayed elsewhere. The Handbook can be thought of as a primer or a gateway book for researchers new to the area of physiological measurement and for readers who would like to better understand the meaning of physiological measures they encounter in research reports.
Noninvasive Assessment of Autonomic Influences on the Heart: Impedance Cardiography and Heart Rate Variability
Noninvasive Assessment of Autonomic Influences on the Heart: Impedance Cardiography and Heart Rate Variability
It's been more than 15 years since the publication of the Society for Psychophysiological Research's (SPR) guidelines on impedance cardiography (ICG) and 10 years since their heart rate variability (HRV) guidelines (Sherwood et al., 1990; Berntson, et al, 1997). The Task Force of the European Society of Cardiology and the North American Society of Pacing and Electrophysiology guidelines on HRV were published simultaneously in Circulation and the European Heart Journal in 1996 (Task Force, 1996a, b). Much has transpired in the areas of ICG and HRV since those seminal works. This chapter seeks to build ...
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