Associations Between Resting Heart Rate and Antisocial Behavior

Studies testing the relationship between autonomic nervous system function as indexed by low resting heart rate and antisocial behavior have found that low resting heart rate is positively correlated with a wide range of antisocial behavior measures. The aim of this review was to assess the influenc...

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Main Authors: Fazilat Pour Ashouri, Hossein Hamadiyan, Afshin Parvizpanah, Sepehr Rasekhi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hormozgan University of Medical Sciences 2017-01-01
Series:Disease and Diagnosis
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ddj.hums.ac.ir/PDF/iejm-45.pdf
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spelling doaj-a97e9522b36340b0b31e3d747d0eb4d62021-09-02T05:43:32ZengHormozgan University of Medical SciencesDisease and Diagnosis2717-32322017-01-01613336iejm-45Associations Between Resting Heart Rate and Antisocial BehaviorFazilat Pour Ashouri0Hossein Hamadiyan1Afshin Parvizpanah2Sepehr Rasekhi3Student Research Committee, Hormozgan University of Medical Sciences, Bandar Abbas, IranStudent Research Committee, Hormozgan University of Medical Sciences, Bandar Abbas, IranStudent Research Committee, Hormozgan University of Medical Sciences, Bandar Abbas, IranStudent Research Committee, Hormozgan University of Medical Sciences, Bandar Abbas, IranStudies testing the relationship between autonomic nervous system function as indexed by low resting heart rate and antisocial behavior have found that low resting heart rate is positively correlated with a wide range of antisocial behavior measures. The aim of this review was to assess the influence of heart rate (HR) level and HR variability (HRV) on the relationship between behavioral variables such as community violence (CV) exposure with proactive and reactive aggression. The explanations can be organized around two main causal mechanisms. In the first, low autonomic arousal (low resting heart rate) is a marker for psychological states that lead to increased antisocial behavior. In the second, physiological characteristics cause both low autonomic arousal (low resting heart rate) and increased antisocial behavior. In respect of hypotheses, we discuss these results in the context of the ‘fearlessness’ and ‘sensation seeking’ hypotheses. Our results offer an initial suggestion that biological characteristics are related to constructs that play central roles in behavioral actions. The results supported the suggestion that there is an association between cognitive function and HR/HRV.https://ddj.hums.ac.ir/PDF/iejm-45.pdfresting heart rateantisocialbehavior
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fazilat Pour Ashouri
Hossein Hamadiyan
Afshin Parvizpanah
Sepehr Rasekhi
spellingShingle Fazilat Pour Ashouri
Hossein Hamadiyan
Afshin Parvizpanah
Sepehr Rasekhi
Associations Between Resting Heart Rate and Antisocial Behavior
Disease and Diagnosis
resting heart rate
antisocial
behavior
author_facet Fazilat Pour Ashouri
Hossein Hamadiyan
Afshin Parvizpanah
Sepehr Rasekhi
author_sort Fazilat Pour Ashouri
title Associations Between Resting Heart Rate and Antisocial Behavior
title_short Associations Between Resting Heart Rate and Antisocial Behavior
title_full Associations Between Resting Heart Rate and Antisocial Behavior
title_fullStr Associations Between Resting Heart Rate and Antisocial Behavior
title_full_unstemmed Associations Between Resting Heart Rate and Antisocial Behavior
title_sort associations between resting heart rate and antisocial behavior
publisher Hormozgan University of Medical Sciences
series Disease and Diagnosis
issn 2717-3232
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Studies testing the relationship between autonomic nervous system function as indexed by low resting heart rate and antisocial behavior have found that low resting heart rate is positively correlated with a wide range of antisocial behavior measures. The aim of this review was to assess the influence of heart rate (HR) level and HR variability (HRV) on the relationship between behavioral variables such as community violence (CV) exposure with proactive and reactive aggression. The explanations can be organized around two main causal mechanisms. In the first, low autonomic arousal (low resting heart rate) is a marker for psychological states that lead to increased antisocial behavior. In the second, physiological characteristics cause both low autonomic arousal (low resting heart rate) and increased antisocial behavior. In respect of hypotheses, we discuss these results in the context of the ‘fearlessness’ and ‘sensation seeking’ hypotheses. Our results offer an initial suggestion that biological characteristics are related to constructs that play central roles in behavioral actions. The results supported the suggestion that there is an association between cognitive function and HR/HRV.
topic resting heart rate
antisocial
behavior
url https://ddj.hums.ac.ir/PDF/iejm-45.pdf
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AT hosseinhamadiyan associationsbetweenrestingheartrateandantisocialbehavior
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