Nell Bennett’s scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


Figure 1. The doppel device (A) and the timeline of the experimental procedure (B). 
The calming effect of a new wearable device during the anticipation of public speech
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May 2017

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843 Reads

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134 Citations

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Nell Bennett

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Andreas Bilicki

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We assessed the calming effect of doppel, a wearable device that delivers heartbeat-like tactile stimulation on the wrist. We tested whether the use of doppel would have a calming effect on physiological arousal and subjective reports of state anxiety during the anticipation of public speech, a validated experimental task that is known to induce anxiety. Two groups of participants were tested in a single-blind design. Both groups wore the device on their wrist during the anticipation of public speech, and were given the cover story that the device was measuring blood pressure. For only one group, the device was turned on and delivered a slow heartbeat-like vibration. Participants in the doppel active condition displayed lower increases in skin conductance responses relative to baseline and reported lower anxiety levels compared to the control group. Therefore, the presence, as opposed to its absence, of a slow rhythm, which in the present study was instantiated as an auxiliary slow heartbeat delivered through doppel, had a significant calming effect on physiological arousal and subjective experience during a socially stressful situation. This finding is discussed in relation to past research on responses and entrainment to rhythms, and their effects on arousal and mood.

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Citations (1)


... Published FFB paradigms often use an external auditory signal to induce a mismatch between veridical and perceived heart rate 9,11,21 . Of the very few paradigms that have examined effects of somatosensory stimulation within the context of FFB on emotional outcomes, a simulated decrease in cardiovascular arousal state was observed to attenuate the experience of anxiety within social situations 26 : Delivery of pulsating vibrotactile stimulation (at a lower than resting HR) to the wrist during a socially stressful challenge led participants to report lower levels of anxiety, compared to controls who received no stimulation. Electrodermal measures of physiological arousal were attenuated yet there were no differences in HR between active and control conditions. ...

Reference:

Somatosensory false feedback biases emotional ratings through interoceptive embodiment
The calming effect of a new wearable device during the anticipation of public speech