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Dive into the research topics where John J. Sollers is active.

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Featured researches published by John J. Sollers.


European Journal of Applied Physiology | 2004

Heart rate variability and its relation to prefrontal cognitive function: the effects of training and detraining

Anita L. Hansen; Bjørn Helge Johnsen; John J. Sollers; Kjetil Stenvik; Julian F. Thayer

The aim of the present study was to investigate the relationship between physical fitness, heart rate variability (HRV) and cognitive function in 37 male sailors from the Royal Norwegian Navy. All subjects participated in an 8-week training program, after which the subjects completed the initial cognitive testing (pre-test). The subjects were assigned into a detrained group (DG) and a trained group (TG) based on their application for further duty. The DG withdrew from the training program for 4 weeks after which all subjects then completed the cognitive testing again (post-test). Physical fitness, measured as maximum oxygen consumption (V̇O2max), resting HRV, and cognitive function, measured using a continuous performance task (CPT) and a working memory test (WMT), were recorded during the pre-test and the post-test, and the data presented as the means and standard deviations. The results showed no between-group differences in V̇O2max or HRV at the pre-test. The DG showed a significant decrease in V̇O2max from the pre- to the post-test and a lower resting HRV than the TG on the post-test. Whereas there were no between-group differences on the CPT or WMT at the pre-test, the TG had faster reaction times and more true positive responses on tests of executive function at the post-test compared to the pre-test. The DG showed faster reaction times on non-executive tasks at the post-test compared to the pre-test. The results are discussed within a neurovisceral integration framework linking parasympathetic outflow to the heart to prefrontal neural functions.


Epilepsia | 2001

Heart rate and heart rate variability changes in the intracarotid sodium amobarbital test.

Geoffrey L. Ahern; John J. Sollers; Richard D. Lane; David M. Labiner; Anne M. Herring; Martin E. Weinand; Ronald Hutzler; Julian F. Thayer

Summary:  Purpose: Changes in heart rate and heart rate variability have been found in prior studies performed during the intracarotid sodium amobarbital (ISA) test. However, these results are not entirely consistent with current models of differential cerebral involvement in the modulation of the heart. This study was designed to re‐investigate this topic with a larger N than has heretofore been used.


Psychophysiology | 2003

The rhythm of the heart in the blink of an eye: Emotion-modulated startle magnitude covaries with heart rate variability

Elisabeth Ruiz-Padial; John J. Sollers; Jaime Vila; Julian F. Thayer

Emotion-modulated startle is a robust phenomenon that has been demonstrated in a wide range of experimental situations. Similarly, heart rate variability (HRV) has been associated with a diverse range of processes including affective and attentional regulation. The present study sought to examine the relationship between these two important measures of affective behavior. Ninety female participants viewed pleasant, neutral, and unpleasant pictures while exposed to acoustic startle stimuli. The eyeblink startle was recorded both during the affective foregrounds and during intertrial intervals. HRV was assessed during a resting baseline and relationships between HRV and startle magnitudes examined. Results indicated that resting HRV was inversely related to startle magnitude during both intertrial intervals and affective foregrounds. In addition, the participants with the highest HRV showed the most differentiated emotion-modulated startle effects, whereas those with the lowest HRV, compared to those with the highest HRV, showed significantly potentiated startle to neutral foregrounds and marginally potentiated startle to pleasant foregrounds. The findings are consistent with models that posit that prefrontal cortical activity modulates subcortical motivation circuits. These results have important implications for the use of startle probe methodology and for HRV in the study of emotional regulation and dysregulation.


Biological Psychiatry | 1998

Heart period variability and depressive symptoms: gender differences

Julian F. Thayer; Marci Smith; Lynn A. Rossy; John J. Sollers; Bruce H. Friedman

BACKGROUND Deceased heart period variability has been associated with cardiac events and depressive symptoms; however, the results of studies are not unequivocal. We hypothesize that gender differences in the various study samples may have contributed to the lack of uniformity of findings. METHODS Time and frequency domain measures of heart period variability during a 5-min resting baseline were examined in 15 depressed (8 female) and 11 nondepressed (6 female) college students. RESULTS Both time and frequency domain measures indicated an interaction between gender and depressive symptoms, such that depressed male subjects showed less heart period variability, whereas depressed female subjects showed more heart period variability compared to their nondepressed counterparts. CONCLUSIONS These results suggest that future studies investigating the relationship between heart period variability and depressive symptoms examine gender differences.


NeuroImage | 2009

High-frequency heart rate variability and cortico-striatal activity in men and women with social phobia.

Fredrik Åhs; John J. Sollers; Tomas Furmark; Mats Fredrikson; Julian F. Thayer

Identifying brain systems that regulate or modulate autonomic nervous system functions may identify pathways through which psychosocial factors can influence health and disease. Reduced high-frequency heart rate variability (HF-HRV) characterizes anxiety disordered patients and is predictive of adverse myocardial events. Sex differences in the prevalence of anxiety disorders and cardiac diseases implicate the possibility of sex specific neural regulation of HF-HRV. We investigated the correlation between HF-HRV and regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) in 28 subjects (15 women) with social phobia undergoing a stressful public speaking task. Regional CBF was measured with [(15)O] water positron emission tomography. Stress induced rCBF correlated positively with HF-HRV in the right supra genual anterior cingulate cortex Brodmanns area (BA) 32, the right head of the caudate nucleus and bilaterally in the medial prefrontal cortex (BA10), extending into the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (BA46) in the left hemisphere. Men showed larger positive co-variation in the caudate than women. These findings underscore the importance of the emotional division of the anterior cingulate cortex, the prefrontal cortex and the striatum in cardiovagal activity. The study replicates and extends results from published functional neuroimaging studies on cardioregulatory or modulatory areas in healthy subjects to men and women with social phobia. Moreover, caudate functions, possibly related to dopaminergic neurotransmission, have sexually dimorphic effects on vagal modulation of the heart.


Psychology & Health | 2004

Stress, coping, and health outcomes among African-Americans: a review of the John Henryism hypothesis

Gary G. Bennett; Marcellus M. Merritt; John J. Sollers; Christopher L. Edwards; Keith E. Whitfield; Dwayne T. Brandon; Reginald D. Tucker

The John Henryism (JH) hypothesis argues that prolonged high-effort coping with chronic psychosocial stressors may be associated with elevated risk for negative health outcomes among those without sufficient socioeconomic resources. Early JH studies found a significant association between high JH, low socioeconomic status, and hypertension among African-Americans. More recently, these findings have been extended to a wide array of health status outcomes, including cardiovascular reactivity, neurohormonal secretion, and negative health behaviors. The present review provides a comprehensive overview of JHs conceptual bases and empirical support. Limitations of the construct are discussed and recommendations are made to guide future theoretical and research efforts in the area.


Health Psychology | 2006

Perceived Racism and Cardiovascular Reactivity and Recovery to Personally Relevant Stress

Marcellus M. Merritt; Gary G. Bennett; Redford B. Williams; Christopher L. Edwards; John J. Sollers

This study evaluated cardiovascular responses (CVR) to an active speech task with blatantly discriminatory (BRC) versus neutral (NRC) stimuli and an anger recall task in a sample of Black men (N = 73; age 18 to 47). Diastolic blood pressure scores were higher for NRC versus BRC stimuli during anger recall (p = .05). Moreover, persons in the NRC group who perceived high levels of racism (vs. no racism or BRC group) during active speech showed larger increases in blood pressure across postspeech rest, anger recall, and subsequent rest (p = .03). The notable elevation in CVR in response to an ambiguous event extends current models of racism suggesting that subtle racism is a psychosocial stressor that erodes health through chronically elevated CVR.


IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Magazine | 2002

Estimating respiratory frequency from autoregressive spectral analysis of heart period

Julian F. Thayer; John J. Sollers; Elisabeth Ruiz-Padial; Jaime Vila

In this article we report the results of a pilot study and a larger investigation that examined the relationship between respiration frequency assessed using the traditional mercury strain gauge and using the central frequency of the HF component derived from autoregressive spectral analysis.


Psychoneuroendocrinology | 2011

Sympathetic and parasympathetic activity in cancer-related fatigue: More evidence for a physiological substrate in cancer survivors

Christopher P. Fagundes; David M. Murray; Beom Seuk Hwang; Jean Philippe Gouin; Julian F. Thayer; John J. Sollers; Charles L. Shapiro; William B. Malarkey; Janice K. Kiecolt-Glaser

Fatigue is a notable clinical problem in cancer survivors, and understanding its pathophysiology is important. This study evaluated relationships between fatigue and both sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous system activity in breast cancer survivors. Norepinephrine and heart rate variability (HRV) were evaluated at rest, as well as during and after a standardized laboratory speech and mental arithmetic stressor. The participants, 109 women who had completed treatment for stage 0-IIIA breast cancer within the past two years, were at least two months post surgery, radiation or chemotherapy, whichever occurred last. Women who reported more fatigue had significantly higher norepinephrine and lower HRV before and after the stressor than their less fatigued counterparts. Fatigue was not related to treatment or disease variables including treatment type, cancer stage, time since diagnosis, and time since treatment. Importantly, the relationship between HRV and cancer-related fatigue was sizeable. Based on research that has demonstrated characteristic age-related HRV decrements, our findings suggest a 20-year difference between fatigued and non-fatigued cancer survivors, raising the possibility that fatigue may signify accelerated aging. Furthermore, lower HRV and elevated norepinephrine have been associated with a number of adverse health outcomes; accordingly, fatigue may also signal the need for increased vigilance to other health threats.


Psychoneuroendocrinology | 2010

Medial prefrontal cortex damage affects physiological and psychological stress responses differently in men and women

Tony W. Buchanan; David Driscoll; Samantha M. Mowrer; John J. Sollers; Julian F. Thayer; Clemens Kirschbaum; Daniel Tranel

The ability to produce appropriate physiological and psychological responses to stressful situations depends on accurate recognition and appraisal of such situations. Such ability is also important for proper emotion regulation. A number of studies have suggested that the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) plays a significant role in emotion regulation, as well as in the control of physiological endpoints of emotion regulation such as the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and autonomic nervous system (ANS). Further, recent work has suggested that men and women may differ in these mechanisms of neural control of emotion regulation. Here, we examined the role of the human mPFC in self-report, ANS, and HPA stress reactivity by testing a group of participants with damage to this region (9 women and 9 men), a brain damaged comparison group (6 women and 6 men), and healthy comparison participants (27 women and 27 men) on an orthostatic challenge and the Trier Social Stress Test (TSST). The mPFC participants showed heightened self-reported stress in response to the TSST. In women, mPFC damage led to an increased cortisol response to the TSST. By contrast, in men, greater volume of mPFC damage was correlated with a decreased cortisol response. Finally, men with mPFC damage showed altered autonomic control of the heart (higher heart rate and lower high frequency heart rate variability) during an orthostatic challenge. These findings support the idea that the mPFC is involved in the regulation of physiological and psychological responses to stress and that this regulation may differ between men and women.

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Marcellus M. Merritt

University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee

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Allison C. Nugent

National Institutes of Health

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Darrell R. Abernethy

Food and Drug Administration

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Earle E. Bain

National Institutes of Health

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