# Sensory processing sensitivity, anxiety, and short-term heart rate variability in older adults living at high southern latitudes: a brief report

**Authors:** Diego Baeza, Leyla Huirimilla-Casanova, Claudia Estrada, Salvador Buccella, Matías Castillo-Aguilar, Cristian Núñez-Espinosa

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2025.1736196 · Frontiers in Psychiatry · 2026-01-12

## TL;DR

This study explores how sensitivity and anxiety relate to heart rate variability in older adults living in high southern latitudes, finding a link between sensitivity and anxiety but not with heart rate patterns.

## Contribution

The study provides novel insights into psychophysiological associations in understudied high southern latitude populations.

## Key findings

- Sensory processing sensitivity is positively associated with anxiety in older adults.
- No meaningful associations were found between anxiety and resting heart rate variability markers.
- Seasonality had no significant effect on the observed associations.

## Abstract

Populations living at high southern latitudes are under-represented in aging and psychophysiology research, despite distinctive environmental stressors (long winters, marked seasonality, isolation). Objectives: To test associations between SPS, anxiety, and HRV in community-dwelling older adults living at high southern latitudes.

We enrolled 101 older adults (mean age 71 years; 72% women) from CADI-UMAG. SPS was measured with the 27-item Highly Sensitive Person Scale (HSPS) and anxiety with the Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI, clinical cut-off ≥16). HRV (5-min artifact-free) was recorded at rest and after a 2-min step/knee-raise test. Bayesian hierarchical models (medians, 95% CrI, pd, ROPE, BF10) accounted for within-subject correlation and seasonality.

HSPS was positively associated with anxiety: a 1-SD increase in HSPS corresponded to a 0.422-SD increase in BAI. Seasonality showed strong evidence for a null effect (BF10 = 0.08). BAI showed no meaningful associations with resting HRV indices—RMSSD (BF10 = 0.046), SDNN (0.200), HF (0.070), LF (0.032), VLF (0.038)—and HSPS did not moderate BAI–HRV links nor HRV responses to exercise (e.g., ΔRMSSD–BAI median 0.003; ROPE = 100%).

In older adults living at high southern latitudes, SPS appears to be associated with anxiety but not to conventional short-term HRV markers, suggesting SPS may reflects psychological vulnerability rather than parasympathetic dysfunction detectable with brief HRV recordings. These findings highlight the need for context-aware mental-health strategies for highly sensitive older adults in understudied southern populations.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** SPS (MESH:D016750), Anxiety (MESH:D001007)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12832625/full.md

## References

35 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12832625/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12832625