The situation-dependent lateralization of sympathetic electrodermal arousal during real-life stress (Picard, Fedor, & Ayzenberg, 2016) may challenge a unitary notion of arousal, and call into question the practice of unilateral electrodermal recording, but there are broader implications. Here we consider a potential relationship between stress-induced lateralized shifts in electrodermal activity, and a theory concerning lateralized emotion-induced cardiac arrhythmia. arousal, brain, cardiovascular, electrodermal, emotion, stress Arousal is a useful term describing states of attentive wakefulness and action-readiness, linked to emotion and measurable in physiological reactivity. Electrodermal activity is an accessible, sensitive correlate of centrally driven sympathetic nervous activity on sweat glands, and is well suited as an index of psychophysiological arousal (Boucsein, 2012). Unlike pupil size or heart rate, electrodermal activity does not incorporate parasympathetic drive; unlike blood pressure, there is no reflexive coupling with viscerosensory feedback; moreover, unlike most sympathetic effector synapses, sweat gland innervation is cholinergic and independent of circulating adrenaline and noradrenaline. Electrodermal recording has helped refine emotion theory and characterize perceptual, cognitive, and affective salience. Moreover, electrodermal biofeedback has therapeutic application to attenuate stress-related arousal, or to enhance the control of cerebrocortical excitability
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