Tsukuba, Japan—Stress is a common experience for everyone, but its multifaceted nature makes it challenging to quantify objectively. Evaluating individual physiological indicators such as blood pressure, perspiration, or brainwave patterns—whether assessed separately or in combination—can be influenced by hidden factors, complicating the overall interpretation of stress.
Tsukuba, Japan—Stress is a common experience for everyone, but its multifaceted nature makes it challenging to quantify objectively. Evaluating individual physiological indicators such as blood pressure, perspiration, or brainwave patterns—whether assessed separately or in combination—can be influenced by hidden factors, complicating the overall interpretation of stress.
In this study, researchers evaluated subjectively perceived stress by considering various physiological indices as an integrated system, encompassing the body and brain, rather than treating each index separately. They performed an experiment wherein subjects were asked to solve computational tasks of varying difficulty levels (low, medium, and high) to induce temporary stress. During these tasks, biological signals such as electroencephalogram, electrocardiogram, and skin electrical activity were measured. Stress was then mathematically evaluated from the overall values of these biological signals using Integrated Information Theory, a method for quantifying the coherence (degree of integration) of a dynamic system consisting of multiple time-series data.
The results showed that the index had the lowest integration (indicating the lowest stress) for tasks of medium difficulty and the highest integration for tasks of low and high difficulty. Analysis of the subjects’ various subjective reports also revealed that the new index had the strongest correlation with the item “boredom,” suggesting that it could serve as a comprehensive measure of stress that included subjective experiences. These findings imply that the feeling of “boredom” underlies subjective stress, providing a new perspective on stress as a response to the absence of explicit external stimuli.
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This work was supported by JSPS KAKENHI (grant numbers 23K28153, 21H05302, 22K12217).
Original Paper
Title of original paper:
Toward a stressor-free stress estimation: Integrated information theory explains the information dynamics of stress
Journal:
iScience
DOI:
10.1016/j.isci.2024.110583
Correspondence
Assistant Professor NIIZATO, Takayuki
Institute of Systems and Information Engineering, University of Tsukuba
Associate Professor NISHIYAMA, Yuta
Department of Information and Management Systems Engineering, Nagaoka University of Technology
Related Link
Institute of Systems and Information Engineering
Journal
iScience
Article Title
Toward stressor-free stress estimation: The integrated information theory explains the information dynamics of stress
Article Publication Date
26-Jul-2024
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