Publication:

Prefrontal hemodynamic after-effects caused by rebreathing may predict affective states - A multimodal functional near-infrared spectroscopy study

Date

Date

Date
2017
Journal Article
Published version

Citations

Citation copied

Holper, L., Scholkmann, F., & Seifritz, E. (2017). Prefrontal hemodynamic after-effects caused by rebreathing may predict affective states - A multimodal functional near-infrared spectroscopy study. Brain Imaging and Behavior, 11, 461–472. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11682-016-9527-4

Abstract

Abstract

Abstract

Brain activity has been shown to be influenced by respiratory behavior. Here, we evaluated whether respiration-induced hypo- or hypercapnia may support differentiation between physiological versus pathological respiratory behavior. In particular, we investigated whether systemic physiological measures could predict the brain's time-frequency hemodynamics after three respiratory challenges (i.e., breath-holding, rebreathing, and hyperventilation) compared to resting-state. Prefrontal hemodynamics were assessed in healthy subjects (N = 

Additional indexing

Creators (Authors)

  • Holper, L
    affiliation.icon.alt
  • Scholkmann, F
    affiliation.icon.alt
  • Seifritz, E
    affiliation.icon.alt

Journal/Series Title

Journal/Series Title

Journal/Series Title

Volume

Volume

Volume
11

Number

Number

Number
2

Page range/Item number

Page range/Item number

Page range/Item number
461

Page end

Page end

Page end
472

Item Type

Item Type

Item Type
Journal Article

Dewey Decimal Classifikation

Dewey Decimal Classifikation

Dewey Decimal Classifikation

Language

Language

Language
English

Publication date

Publication date

Publication date
2017

Date available

Date available

Date available
2016-09-09

Publisher

Publisher

Publisher

ISSN or e-ISSN

ISSN or e-ISSN

ISSN or e-ISSN
1931-7557

OA Status

OA Status

OA Status
Closed

PubMed ID

PubMed ID

PubMed ID

Citations

Citation copied

Holper, L., Scholkmann, F., & Seifritz, E. (2017). Prefrontal hemodynamic after-effects caused by rebreathing may predict affective states - A multimodal functional near-infrared spectroscopy study. Brain Imaging and Behavior, 11, 461–472. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11682-016-9527-4

Closed
Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Files

Files

Files
Files available to download:1

Files

Files

Files
Files available to download:1
Loading...
Thumbnail Image