Publications by authors named "Xavier Bornas"

Growing evidence supports the hypothesis that temperamental traits are not static throughout adolescence. The known links between both reactive and regulatory temperament and anxiety symptoms should be investigated bearing this hypothesis in mind. This study collected self-reported data on behavioral inhibition system (BIS) sensitivity, attentional control (AC), and anxiety symptomatology, from 296 adolescents (64.

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The present study aimed to provide further evidence on the usefulness of non-linear cardiac measures when examining the output of the cardiac system. Scale-invariant self-similarity and entropy, in addition to heart rate variability (HRV) given by time- and frequency-domain measures were calculated in a sample of N = 55 healthy adolescents (M = 14.122, SD = 0.

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This paper aimed to (a) validate a novel technique that quantifies the length of the trajectories the cardiac system follows within a two-dimensional state-space, and (b) test its usefulness to better understand how cognitive emotion regulation (CER) style is associated with cardiac output. A positive CER style was assessed in a sample of healthy adolescents (n = 57), and mean and total distances, in addition to heart rate variability (HRV) measures and cardiac entropy (SampEn), were calculated during a conflict discussion with the adolescents' mothers. Associations between distances and HRV measures in time and frequency-domains and SampEn were examined to better understand the physiological meaning of distances; further, whether a positive CER style would predict distances, HRV, and SampEn.

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Adolescence is a vulnerable period in terms of the onset of anxiety disorders, and dyadic parent-adolescent interactions may play a key role in either increasing or reducing the risk of psychopathologies. This study examines the presence of physiological synchrony (specifically, linkage in interbeat interval series) and non-verbal synchrony in positive and negative interactions between adolescents (aged 13-16) and their fathers. Non-verbal synchrony was quantified through the coordination of the interactants' body movements, using an automated video-analysis algorithm (motion energy analysis).

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Background: Anxiety disorders frequently have an onset during adolescence, which when left untreated could lead to a chronic course and outcome. This study aimed to examine the way in which a cognitive behaviour therapy-based programme (Super Skills for Life - adolescent version; SSL-A) could change the course of anxiety symptoms through adolescent's behavioural performance and cardiac function.

Method: Sixty-one adolescents at risk of developing an anxiety disorder (45.

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Article Synopsis
  • An inverted U-shaped pattern in heart rate (HR) and a U-shaped pattern in heart rate variability (HRV) occur during acute stress, with less known about how cardiac complexity changes.
  • The study analyzed how different emotion regulation (ER) styles in adolescents affect their heart responses to stress, predicting those with a highly negative ER style would show less autonomic flexibility.
  • Results confirmed both HR and HRV changes aligned with predictions, and the adolescents with a positive ER style exhibited greater cardiac changes and significant associations between measures compared to those with negative ER styles.
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This study aimed: (1) to identify heterogeneous trajectories of anxiety symptoms in early adolescence; (2) to analyze the relationships between risk factors and identified trajectories; (3) to study the association between anxiety symptom trajectories and depression symptom course. Anxiety and depressive symptoms of 825 participants (44.40% boys; mean initial age = 13.

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This paper introduces a new measure to evaluate heart output from a dynamical systems approach. The measure is based on the time delay technique for two-dimensional state space reconstruction from time series of interbeat intervals. The system's trajectories within this space are depicted and the mean distance, as well as the total and maximum distances travelled by the system, are calculated in pixels.

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How well adolescents can self-regulate in the face of stressors has considerable implications for long-term well-being and risk of psychopathology. This study investigated sex differences in adolescents' cardiac reactivity and recovery during a stressful task. Measures of cardiac variability (linear) and complexity (nonlinear) were obtained from N = 92 adolescents, 41 males (M age = 13.

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Atypical vagal reactivity has been linked to internalizing psychopathology and less adaptive emotion regulation, but reactive cardiac entropy is largely unexplored. Therefore, this study investigated reactive vagally-mediated heart-rate variability (vmHRV) and cardiac entropy in relation to emotion regulation. Electrocardiograms of 32 children (9-13 years) with internalizing difficulties and 25 healthy controls were recorded during a baseline and a sad film.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates how negative and positive cognitive emotion regulation strategies affect heart function during stress in adolescents.
  • Eighty-nine participants, mostly around 13 years old, underwent a stress test while their emotion regulation and cardiac responses were monitored.
  • Findings reveal that those with a negative emotion regulation style show less heart rate variability and recovery, indicating lower autonomic flexibility during stressful events.
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The association between decreased heart rate variability (HRV) and increased internalizing symptoms is well documented. Adolescence is a critical period for the development of mental health problems, in particular internalizing symptoms. Previous research has illustrated sex differences in adolescent HRV, such that females have reduced short-term resting state HRV compared to males.

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The risk of suffering anxiety disorders is associated with sustained subthreshold symptoms of anxiety. This study evaluated the stability of anxiety scores (high, moderate or low) across a six-month period in early adolescents (N = 95). The associations between sustained anxiety, vagally-mediated heart rate variability (vmHRV), sympathetic activity, and heart rate fractal dynamics in everyday life conditions were analyzed.

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Internalizing psychopathology and dysregulated negative affect are characterized by dysregulation in the autonomic nervous system and reduced heart rate variability (HRV) due to increases in sympathetic activity alongside reduced vagal tone. The neurovisceral system is however, a complex nonlinear system, and nonlinear indices related to psychopathology are so far less studied in children. Essential nonlinear properties of a system can be found in two main domains: the informational domain and the invariant domain.

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Article Synopsis
  • This study investigates the link between heart rate variability (HRV) and anxiety symptoms in adolescents, discovering that lower HRV is associated with high anxiety levels.
  • In the research, high-anxiety and low-anxiety groups of boys and girls were monitored during school activities to assess their cardiac function.
  • Findings indicate that, while high-anxiety adolescents showed decreased HRV overall, girls exhibited lower HRV and complexity than boys, highlighting a potential vulnerability for girls in developing anxiety disorders.
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Many physiological systems are multistable, i.e. they operate at different time scales under an allometric control process.

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Maladaptive patterns of cardiac adjustment to stress in adolescents may reveal their vulnerability to anxiety disorders (ADs). Traditional research in this field has focused on anxiety levels, whereas the time course of anxiety has rarely been considered. Nevertheless, since overall anxiety decreases as adolescence progresses, increasing time courses are clinically relevant and can be associated with maladaptive contextual adjustment.

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Article Synopsis
  • A recent model of psychotherapy was tested with two main predictions regarding anxiety treatment intensity: only high intensity treatments can reduce increasing anxiety, while both high and low intensity treatments should work on non-increasing anxiety.
  • In a study with 74 adolescents, only those receiving high intensity treatment showed reduced anxiety on an increasing trajectory.
  • Neither treatment type successfully lowered anxiety for participants who had a non-increasing trajectory, suggesting that the severity and progression of anxiety should be considered in treatment approaches.
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: Anxiety symptoms in adolescence have been found to be associated with heart rate variability (HRV) linear features, but more basic properties of the cardiac system remain unexplored. This study focused on the fractal nature of 90 minute-long interbeat fluctuations from 24 adolescents with high anxiety and 26 with low anxiety to (a) evaluate if allometric scaling exponents and linear HRV measures allow for distinction between groups, and (b) assess the associations between these measures and sensitivity to punishment (SP), a temperamental characteristic strongly correlated with anxiety. : Cardiac functioning was recorded and allometric exponents and vagally mediated HRV as indexed by the high frequency (HF) band power were calculated.

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This meta-analysis aimed at gathering and summarising the findings on nonlinear biomarkers in the field of emotional disorders under the hypothesis that diseased systems show lowered complexity and hence less flexibility to adjust daily contexts. Scientific manuscripts from 1970 to 2014 were reviewed, 58 articles were analysed, and independent meta-analyses on anxiety disorders, bipolar disorders, and depressive disorders were conducted. Results revealed that anxious patients exhibited lower complexity than controls (p<0.

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Article Synopsis
  • Nonlinear measures can provide insights into the heart's beating patterns, particularly when recordings are taken during daily activities for a clearer understanding of cardiac output.
  • The study involved monitoring 50 adolescents over two hours while they engaged in school activities, focusing on the differences in cardiac output between those with high anxiety and low anxiety.
  • Results showed that high-anxious adolescents had significantly lower fractal dimension and entropy in their heartbeats, indicating a less complex regulatory mechanism in their cardiac system compared to their low-anxiety peers.
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Long-range temporal correlations (LRTC) in brain oscillations have been found to be associated with depression severity in clinically depressed patients. Less is known, however, about the relationships between LRTC and proneness to engage in depression-related cognitive emotion regulation (ER) strategies which characterize both clinically and subclinically depressed (SBD) people. In this study we applied detrended fluctuation analysis to the amplitude envelope of broad band, theta band, and alpha band spontaneous EEG oscillations of a group of SBD individuals and a group of non-depressed individuals (both groups from a sample of healthy adults, N = 120), to whom brooding and thought suppression questionnaires were administered.

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This study is aimed at elucidating (a) whether heart rate (HR) complexity measures are associated with the attentional orienting function, and (b) which of these measures better predicts orienting efficiency indexes. Vagal tone, sample entropy, scaling exponents ?1 and ?2, and fractal dimension (FD) were calculated in HR time series (n=109). Vagal tone, entropy, and FD were positively associated with orienting, while this association was negative for ?2.

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The current study aimed to explore whether self-reported attentional control (AC) and the attentional network functioning would predict spontaneous emotion downregulation after emotional induction. A total of 117 healthy volunteers were asked to continuously rate their discomfort while looking at affective pictures, as well as for a period of time after exposure. After controlling for trait anxiety, higher self-reported AC significantly predicted a greater spontaneous emotional downregulation after exposure to aversive pictures.

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Attentional network functioning in emotionally neutral conditions and self-reported attentional control (AC) were analysed as predictors of the tendency to engage in dysfunctional emotion regulation strategies. Diminished attentional orienting predicted an increased tendency to engage in brooding rumination, and enhanced alertness predicted a greater chance of suppression, beyond trait anxiety and self-reported AC, which were not predictive of either rumination or suppression. This is the first study to show that some forms of dysfunctional emotion regulation are related to the attentional network functioning in emotionally neutral conditions.

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Synopsis of recent research by authors named "Xavier Bornas"

  • - Xavier Bornas' recent research primarily focuses on the interplay between emotional regulation, anxiety symptoms, and physiological responses, particularly cardiac function, in adolescents.
  • - His studies highlight how temperamental changes during adolescence can influence anxiety symptomatology and how various emotion regulation styles, both positive and negative, correlate with cardiac dynamics during stress.
  • - Bornas employs innovative measures such as heart rate variability and non-linear cardiac assessments to better understand the physiological underpinnings of anxiety, revealing critical insights into how adolescents manage stress and emotional challenges.