Abstract
To develop a novel synthetic multi-modal variable capable of capturing cardiovascular responses to acute mental stress and the stress-mitigating effect of transcutaneous median nerve stimulation (TMNS), as an initial step toward the overarching goal of enabling closed-loop controlled mitigation of the physiological response to acute mental stress. Using data collected from 40 experiments in 20 participants involving acute mental stress and TMNS, we examined the ability of six plausibly explainable physio-markers to capture cardiovascular responses to acute mental stress and TMNS. Then, we developed a novel synthetic multi-modal variable by fusing the six physio-markers based on numerical optimization and compared its ability to capture cardiovascular responses to acute mental stress and TMNS against the six physio-markers in isolation. The synthetic multi-modal variable showed explainable responses to acute mental stress and TMNS in more experiments (24 vs ≤19). It also exhibited superior consistency, balanced sensitivity, and robustness compared to individual physio-markers. The results showed the promise of the synthetic multi-modal variable as a means to measure cardiovascular responses to acute mental stress and TMNS. However, the results also suggested the potential necessity to develop a personalized synthetic multi-modal variable. The findings of this work may inform the realization of TMNS-enabled closed-loop control systems for the mitigation of sympathetic arousal to acute mental stress by leveraging physiological measurements that can readily be implemented in wearable form factors.
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