“…Besides the measurement of HRV, which has been used predominantly for the assessment of sympathovagal balance, these techniques include indices of the electrical remodeling of the ventricles (e.g., the QRS‐T angle [Kardys et al., 2003]), ventricular depolarization (e.g., high‐frequency QRS [HFQRS] ECG [Abboud, Berenfeld, & Sadeh, 1991; Schlegel et al., 2004]), and ventricular repolarization. The indices of ventricular repolarization comprise various indices of QT interval variability (QTV), such as the QT variability index (QTVI) (Atiga et al., 1998; Berger et al., 1997; Starc & Schlegel, 2006) and the unexplained part of QTV (unexplained QTV), which represents an intrinsic part of QTV independent of simultaneous heart rate variability, the influence of the heart rate on QTV having been eliminated (Starc & Schlegel, 2008).…”