Abstract

BackgroundThis paper suggests a method to assess the extent to which ultra-short Heart Rate Variability (HRV) features (less than 5 min) can be considered as valid surrogates of short HRV features (nominally 5 min). Short term HRV analysis has been widely investigated for mental stress assessment, whereas the validity of ultra-short HRV features remains unclear. Therefore, this study proposes a method to explore the extent to which HRV excerpts can be shortened without losing their ability to automatically detect mental stress.MethodsECGs were acquired from 42 healthy subjects during a university examination and resting condition. 23 features were extracted from HRV excerpts of different lengths (i.e., 30 s, 1 min, 2 min, 3 min, and 5 min). Significant differences between rest and stress phases were investigated using non-parametric statistical tests at different time-scales. Features extracted from each ultra-short length were compared with the standard short HRV features, assumed as the benchmark, via Spearman’s rank correlation analysis and Bland-Altman plots during rest and stress phases. Using data-driven machine learning approaches, a model aiming to detect mental stress was trained, validated and tested using short HRV features, and assessed on the ultra-short HRV features.ResultsSix out of 23 ultra-short HRV features (MeanNN, StdNN, MeanHR, StdHR, HF, and SD2) displayed consistency across all of the excerpt lengths (i.e., from 5 to 1 min) and 3 out of those 6 ultra-short HRV features (MeanNN, StdHR, and HF) achieved good performance (accuracy above 88%) when employed in a well-dimensioned automatic classifier.ConclusionThis study concluded that 6 ultra-short HRV features are valid surrogates of short HRV features for mental stress investigation.

Highlights

  • This paper suggests a method to assess the extent to which ultra-short Heart Rate Variability (HRV) features can be considered as valid surrogates of short HRV features

  • The current paper aims to show to what extent HRV features are reliable and accurate to automatically detect mental stress when moving from short to ultra-short term HRV analysis

  • HRV features median (MD), standard deviation (SD), 25th and 75th percentiles calculated on 5-min, 3-min, 2-min, 1-min, and 30-s NN data series are given in the Additional file 1: Table S2-S6, respectively

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Summary

Introduction

This paper suggests a method to assess the extent to which ultra-short Heart Rate Variability (HRV) features (less than 5 min) can be considered as valid surrogates of short HRV features (nominally 5 min). Short term HRV analysis has been widely investigated for mental stress assessment, whereas the validity of ultra-short HRV features remains unclear. This study proposes a method to explore the extent to which HRV excerpts can be shortened without losing their ability to automatically detect mental stress. Stress is defined by the American Psychological Association as “the pattern of specific and nonspecific responses an organism makes to stimulus events that disturb its equilibrium and tax or exceed its ability to cope” [1]. Stress influences judgment and decision-making, and has been shown to reduce human performance [4, 13]. There is a need to better understand the impact of stress on cognition and performance, especially in high-risk domains such as military, policing, surgery, aviation, driving, and elite-level sport, in which risks or threats are prevalent and they can result in devastating consequences [4, 14]

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