Researchers at the Brighton and Sussex Medical School in UK found a link between the cycles of a beating heart and the likelihood of someone taking fright.
Tests on healthy volunteers found that they were more likely to feel a sense of fear at the moment when their hearts are contracting and pumping blood around their bodies, compared with the point when the heartbeat is relaxed.
The results suggest that the heart is able to influence how the brain responds to a fearful event, depending on which point it is at in its regular cycle of contraction and relaxation, The Independent reported.
The study tested the fear response of 20 healthy volunteers as they were shown images of fearful faces while connected to heart monitors.
"Our results show that if we see a fearful face during systole - when the heart is pumping - then we judge this fearful face as more intense than if we see the very same fearful face during diastole - when the heart is relaxed," Garfinkel said.
"We demonstrated that fearful faces are better detected at systole, when they are perceived as more fearful, relative to diastole. Thus our hearts can also affect what we see and what we don't see - and guide whether we see fear," she said.
To investigate the phenomenon further the scientists used a brain scanner to show the brain amygdala, which is sometimes called the 'seat of emotion', influences how the heart changes a person's perception of fear.
"We hope that by increasing our understanding about how fear is processed and ways that it could be reduced, we may be able to develop more successful treatments for [anxiety disorders], and also for those, such as war veterans, who may be suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder," she said.
The study will be presented at the British Neuroscience Association Festival in London.
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