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Heart rate variability (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heart_rate_variability) may also be an interesting measure here.



When I did biofeedback therapy a couple of years ago, heart rate variability was the main proxy they used for relaxation. The goal for session was to obtain a steady heart rate.


Counterintuitively, it's actually the other way around -- at rest, more variability in your heart rate (over a roughly 20 second period) is correlated with lower levels of stress. Deep, slow, regular breathing tends to increase HRV, since heart rate is linked to respiration -- your heart beats a little faster when you inhale, a little slower when you exhale. It's desirable to have big, regular swings in heart rate, synchronized with your respiration.

Thankfully, biofeedback protocols will typically hide these details, and just calculate a single metric for you to attempt to optimize.


No, I actually just remembered it wrong.

I remember what the chart looks like now, and yes the goal was in fact to have your heart rate vary with breath.

When I started the session, my heart rate would jump around almost arbitrarily. By the end, it would fall into a steady rhythm of rising and falling as I breathed.




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