International Journal of Biometeorology

, Volume 43, Issue 1, pp 31–37 | Cite as

The effects of extra-low-frequency atmospheric pressure oscillations on human mental activity

  • A. A. Delyukov
  • L.  Didyk
ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Abstract

 Slight atmospheric pressure oscillations (APO) in the extra-low-frequency range below 0.1 Hz, which frequently occur naturally, can influence human mental activity. This phenomenon has been observed in experiments with a group of 12 healthy volunteers exposed to experimentally created APO with amplitudes 30–50 Pa in the frequency band 0.011–0.17 Hz. Exposure of the subjects to APO for 15–30 min caused significant changes in attention and short-term memory functions, performance rate, and mental processing flexibility. The character of the response depended on the APO frequency and coherence. Periodic APO promoted purposeful mental activity, accompanied by an increase in breath-holding duration and a slower heart rate. On the other hand, quasi-chaotic APO, similar to the natural perturbations of atmospheric pressure, disrupted mental activity. These observations suggest that APO could be partly responsible for meteorosensitivity in humans.

Key words Atmospheric pressure Extra-low-frequency oscillations Psycho-physiological response Mental work efficiency 

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Copyright information

© International Society of Biometeorology 1999

Authors and Affiliations

  • A. A. Delyukov
    • 1
  • L.  Didyk
    • 1
  1. 1.Lomonosova 30/2, kv.25, Kiev-22, 252022, UkraineUA

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