Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems 2005
DOI: 10.1145/1054972.1055040
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Emotions and heart rate while sitting on a chair

Abstract: New methods for unobtrusive monitoring of computer users' emotion psychophysiology are very much needed in human-computer interaction research. The present aim was to study heart rate changes during emotionally provocative stimulation. Six-second long auditory, visual, and audiovisual emotionally negative, neutral, and positive stimuli were presented to 24 participants. Heart rate responses were measured with a regular office chair embedded with electromechanical film (the EMFi chair) and with traditional earl… Show more

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Cited by 139 publications
(87 citation statements)
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“…This could be attributed to the fact that the picture presentation was too short to elicit any changes in HR. In the current experiment, only 8 pictures were shown per condition, while other experiments that found differences in HR used larger samples of pictures [25,26].…”
Section: Discussion On Effect Of the Stressormentioning
confidence: 89%
“…This could be attributed to the fact that the picture presentation was too short to elicit any changes in HR. In the current experiment, only 8 pictures were shown per condition, while other experiments that found differences in HR used larger samples of pictures [25,26].…”
Section: Discussion On Effect Of the Stressormentioning
confidence: 89%
“…It is worth to note that the experimental design was based on literature on physiological responses to emotional stimulation by affective auditory and visual stimuli (Anttonen & Surakka, 2005;Bradley & Lang, 2000;Bradley, Miccoli, Escrig, & Lang, 2008;Lang, Greenwald, Bradley, & Hamm, 1993;Madan, Harrison, & Mathewson, 2017;Verona, Patrick, Curtin, Bradley, & Lang, 2004;Zhou, Qu, Jiao, & Helander, 2014). The order of the cry episodes was randomized for each participant.…”
Section: Procedure: Stimuli Presentation and Response Measurementsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Research related to measuring arousal using heart rate has largely focused on the change of beats per minute from the presentation of a stimuli [3,39]. Findings suggest that average heart rates tend to decrease over time for both low-arousal and higharousal conditions from the onset of the emotional stimuli [39].…”
Section: Theory-based Expectationsmentioning
confidence: 99%