325 results on '"interoceptive accuracy"'
Search Results
2. Exploring the Link Between Interoception and Symptom Severity in Premature Ventricular Contractions.
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Limonova, Alena S., Minenko, Irina A., Sukmanova, Anastasia A., Kutsenko, Vladimir A., Kulikova, Sofya P., Nazarova, Maria A., Davtyan, Karapet V., Drapkina, Oxana M., and Ershova, Alexandra I.
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ARRHYTHMIA , *EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) , *CONFOUNDING variables , *FAT , *REGRESSION analysis , *INTEROCEPTION - Abstract
Background/Objectives: The physiological basis underlying symptomatic versus asymptomatic premature ventricular contractions (PVCs) remains poorly understood. However, symptomatic PVCs can significantly impair quality of life. In patients without structural heart disease, symptom intensity is crucial for guiding management strategies and determining the need for medical or surgical intervention. In this study, we aimed, for the first time, to examine the associations between PVC symptoms and cardiac interoception. Methods: This study included 34 participants with PVCs (20 women; median age = 42 years; 17 participants had asymptomatic PVCs) without concomitant disorders. Interoception was assessed through interoceptive accuracy (IA) probed by two behavioral tests—mental tracking (MT) and heartbeat detection (HBD)—and the neurophysiological marker of cardiac interoception, the heartbeat-evoked potentials (HEPs). Symptom intensity scores reported by patients served as the response variable in the regression analysis, with IA and HEP as predictors. Other factors such as sex, age, percent of body fat, trait anxiety, and alexithymia were added to the models as confounding variables. Results: IAMT was significantly higher in patients with symptomatic PVCs. IAMT and HEP modulation for the HBD task were associated with symptom intensity. A combined regression model incorporating both metrics showed the highest predictive accuracy for symptom severity. Adding confounding variables improved model quality (lower AIC); however, only the male sex emerged as a significant negative predictor for symptom intensity. Conclusions: Our findings confirm a significant association between interoception and PVC symptom severity. Integrating behavioral and neurophysiological interoception measures enhances symptom prediction accuracy, suggesting new ways to develop diagnostic and non-invasive treatment strategies targeting interoception in PVC management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. Psychotherapists' interoceptive awareness and accuracy.
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Halonen, Satu, Laitila, Aarno, Parviainen, Tiina, and Kykyri, Virpi‐Liisa
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PSYCHOTHERAPISTS , *PSYCHOTHERAPY , *INTEROCEPTION , *WORK experience (Employment) , *ADULTS - Abstract
Objective Methods Results Conclusion This study examined the different dimensions of interoception in psychotherapists to better understand the significance of interoception in therapeutic work.Data on objectively defined interoceptive accuracy, response confidence and subjectively assessed interoceptive awareness were collected from psychotherapists. Forty Finnish psychotherapists varying in work experience and theoretical orientation participated in this field study. The interoceptive awareness of their clients (n = 67) in individual psychotherapy was also assessed. The psychotherapists' interoceptive accuracy was compared with that of a reference sample of working adults (n = 38). Data were analysed using mixed methods. The research approach was descriptive and pragmatic.The results showed statistically significantly higher interoceptive awareness in the psychotherapists than clients, which showed a large effect size: Cohen's d = 1.54, 95% CI [1.10, 1.99]. However, the therapists' interoceptive accuracy did not differ from that of a reference sample of persons without therapy training, d = 0.06, CI [−0.40, 0.53].Expanding knowledge on interoception can help psychotherapists to develop professionally while supporting their psychological well‐being. This study contributes to research on the role of interoceptive accuracy and awareness in embodied interaction in psychotherapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Exploring sex differences in cardiac interoceptive accuracy using the phase adjustment task.
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Spooner, Ria, Bird, Jonathan M., Irigoras Izagirre, Nerea, Clemente, Rhea, Fernandez Fueyo, Elisa, Budworth, Gemma, Cocirla, Dorina, Todd, Jennifer, Aspell, Jane, Leganes, Mateo, Watling, Dawn, Plans, David, Brewer, Rebecca, and Murphy, Jennifer
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DEMOGRAPHIC characteristics , *INTEROCEPTION , *METACOGNITION , *SEX work , *FEMALES - Abstract
Previous evidence suggests males and females differ with respect to interoception—the processing of internal bodily signals—with males typically outperforming females on tasks of interoceptive accuracy. However, interpretation of existing evidence in the cardiac domain is hindered by the limitations of existing tools. In this investigation, we pooled data from several samples to examine sex differences in cardiac interoceptive accuracy on the phase adjustment task, a new measure that overcomes several limitations of the existing tools. In a sample of 266 individuals, we observed that females outperformed males, indicative of better cardiac interoceptive accuracy, but had lower confidence than males. These results held after controlling for sex differences in demographic, physiological and engagement factors. Importantly, these results were specific to the measure of cardiac interoceptive accuracy. No sex differences were observed for individuals who completed the structurally identical screener task, although a similar pattern of results was observed in relation to confidence. These surprising data suggest the presence of a female advantage for cardiac interoceptive accuracy and potential differences in interoceptive awareness (metacognition). Possible reasons for mixed results in the literature, as well as implications for theory and future research, are discussed. This paper reports on novel work exploring sex differences in cardiac interoceptive accuracy using a novel test that overcomes limitations of existing measures. At odds with existing evidence, we observed a female advantage for cardiac interoceptive accuracy. This works suggests a need to re‐examine evidence using traditional measures of interoception. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Exploring the relationship between cardiac awareness and balance.
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Salvato, Gerardo, Bertolotti, Claudio, Sellitto, Manuela, Fazia, Teresa, Crivelli, Damiano, De Maio, Gabriele, Magnani, Francesca Giulia, Leo, Alessandra, Bianconi, Tatiana, Cortesi, Maria Chiara, Spinelli, Michele, and Bottini, Gabriella
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POSTURAL balance , *AUTONOMIC nervous system , *MEDICAL robotics , *BODY image , *MEDICAL equipment , *INTEROCEPTION , *POSTURAL muscles - Abstract
Summary: Postural balance requires the interplay between several physiological signals. Indirect evidence suggests that the perception of signals arising from the autonomic nervous system might play a role (e.g. cardiac awareness). Here, we tested this hypothesis by investigating the relationship between postural control and cardiac awareness (i.e. interoception) in a sample of N = 70 healthy individuals. Postural control was measured using a medical robotic device, while cardiac awareness was evaluated using the heartbeat counting task. A within-subject design included two platform configurations (static, unstable) and two visual feedback conditions (eyes open, eyes closed). For each condition, we measured the sway area and the range of oscillation of the platform, as well as the range of oscillation and the quantity of movement of participants' trunk. In the "platform unstable, eyes closed" condition, participants with higher cardiac awareness demonstrated a significantly smaller sway area and reduced oscillations of both the platform and their trunk. These findings hint at a potential link between interoception and postural control, suggesting that the perception of internal body signals might sustain balance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. No differences between remote and laboratory-based testing of cardiac interoceptive accuracy using the phase adjustment task
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Ria Spooner, Jonathan M. Bird, Rhea Clemente, Nerea Irigoras Izagirre, Elisa Fernandez Fueyo, Dawn Watling, David Plans, Rebecca Brewer, Geoffrey Bird, and Jennifer Murphy
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Interoception ,Interoceptive accuracy ,Online testing ,Remote testing ,Photoplethysmography ,Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract In recent years, there has been an increased interest in remote testing methods for quantifying individual differences in interoception, the perception of the body’s internal state. Hampering the adoption of remote methods are concerns as to the quality of data obtained remotely. Using data from several studies, we sought to compare the performance of individuals who completed the Phase Adjustment Task—a new measure of cardiac interoceptive accuracy that can be administered via a smartphone application—supervised in a laboratory against those who completed the task remotely. Across a total sample of 205 individuals (119 remote and 86 laboratory), we observed no significant differences in task performance between the two groups. These results held when matching groups on demographic variables (e.g., age) and considering only individuals who had successfully completed a screener task. Overall, these data attest to the suitability of the Phase Adjustment Task for remote testing, providing an opportunity to collect larger and more diverse samples for future interoception research.
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- 2024
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7. Exploring the relationship between cardiac awareness and balance
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Gerardo Salvato, Claudio Bertolotti, Manuela Sellitto, Teresa Fazia, Damiano Crivelli, Gabriele De Maio, Francesca Giulia Magnani, Alessandra Leo, Tatiana Bianconi, Maria Chiara Cortesi, Michele Spinelli, and Gabriella Bottini
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Interoceptive accuracy ,Postural balance ,Postural control ,Heartbeat counting Task ,Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Summary Postural balance requires the interplay between several physiological signals. Indirect evidence suggests that the perception of signals arising from the autonomic nervous system might play a role (e.g. cardiac awareness). Here, we tested this hypothesis by investigating the relationship between postural control and cardiac awareness (i.e. interoception) in a sample of N = 70 healthy individuals. Postural control was measured using a medical robotic device, while cardiac awareness was evaluated using the heartbeat counting task. A within-subject design included two platform configurations (static, unstable) and two visual feedback conditions (eyes open, eyes closed). For each condition, we measured the sway area and the range of oscillation of the platform, as well as the range of oscillation and the quantity of movement of participants’ trunk. In the “platform unstable, eyes closed” condition, participants with higher cardiac awareness demonstrated a significantly smaller sway area and reduced oscillations of both the platform and their trunk. These findings hint at a potential link between interoception and postural control, suggesting that the perception of internal body signals might sustain balance.
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. The relationship between sleep and interoception.
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Bynum, Louisa G. and Brindle, Ryan C.
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SLEEP latency , *SLEEP quality , *BIOLOGICAL systems , *BODY image , *SLEEP , *INTEROCEPTION - Abstract
Summary The present study aimed to characterise the relationship between sleep and interoception in two independent studies. Theoretical grounds for such a relationship include a weak relationship between subjectively‐ and objectively‐measured sleep, the covariance of sleep with pain, as well as the mass regulation of a number of visceral biological systems. In addition, such a relationship is often reflected in our language (i.e., ‘feeling’ tired). In both studies (Study 1: N = 118, 73% female, mean age 20.98 years; Study 2: N = 830, 49% female, mean age 38.04 years) sleep over the last month was self‐reported. Confidence in interoceptive accuracy, which is the precision with which a person can monitor visceral signals, was measured using the Interoceptive Accuracy Scale, while interoceptive attention, which is the dispositional tendency to attend to bodily signals, was measured using the Body Perception Questionnaire. Study 1 revealed a relationship between long sleep latency and low confidence in interoceptive accuracy (β = −0.222, p = 0.021) and poor sleep quality and less interoceptive attention (β = −0.226, p = 0.016). Study 2 replicated these results as well as made clear a more general pattern whereby poor sleep—characterised by short duration, poor quality, less efficiency, long latency, and more frequent nighttime awakenings—related to an interoceptive phenotype of less confidence in interoceptive accuracy and more interoceptive attention (all β ≥ 0.047, p ≤ 0.17). In conclusion, results from these two independent studies provide robust cross‐sectional evidence for associations between various dimensions of poor sleep and greater interoceptive attention, but less confidence in interoceptive accuracy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. The influence of cardiac synchronisation on self-attribution to external objects in male participants.
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Hiroshi Shibata, Tokiko Harada, and Hideki Ohira
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INTEROCEPTION ,EMOTIONS ,SYNCHRONIC order ,SELF-perception ,SELF ,SPHERES - Abstract
Interoception, the representation of our bodily state derived from physiological signals, is fundamental to our sense of self. Previous studies using cardiac feedback paradigms demonstrated interoceptive effects on self-perception. However, it remains unclear whether interoceptive information can extend selfattribution to non-bodily objects. This study aimed to elucidate whether cardiac signals can induce self-attribution to non-bodily objects and how interoceptive accuracy modulates this effect. A total of 44 male volunteers participated in an emotion assignment task where they viewed images of palms (bodily targets) and spheres (non-bodily targets) flashing in or out of sync with their heartbeat and assigned emotional images (positive/negative) to these targets. A heartbeat discrimination task was used to measure the interoceptive accuracy. The results showed no significant effect of synchronisation on emotion assignment for either the target type or the valence of the emotional images. However, participants with high interoceptive accuracy attributed both positive and negative images more to synchronised targets than those with low interoceptive accuracy. These findings suggest that although cardiac synchronisation may not uniformly facilitate the self-attribution of external objects, interoceptive accuracy may mediate attention to synchrony. Future studies should explore the conditions under which cardiac signals influence self-attribution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. Changes in interoceptive accuracy related to emotional interference in somatic symptom disorder
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Deokjong Lee, Se Joo Kim, Jooah Cheon, Young-Chul Jung, and Jee In Kang
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Emotional processing ,Heartbeat perception task ,Heart rate variability ,Interoceptive accuracy ,Somatic symptom disorder ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Abstract Objective The somatic symptom disorder (SSD) is characterized by one or more distressing or disabling somatic symptoms accompanied by an excessive amount of time, energy and emotion related to the symptoms. These manifestations of SSD have been linked to alterations in perception and appraisal of bodily signals. We hypothesized that SSD patients would exhibit changes in interoceptive accuracy (IA), particularly when emotional processing is involved. Methods Twenty-three patients with SSD and 20 healthy controls were recruited. IA was assessed using the heartbeat perception task. The task was performed in the absence of stimuli as well as in the presence of emotional interference, i.e., photographs of faces with an emotional expression. IA were examined for correlation with measures related to their somatic symptoms, including resting-state heart rate variability (HRV). Results There was no significant difference in the absolute values of IA between patients with SSD and healthy controls, regardless of the condition. However, the degree of difference in IA without emotional interference and with neutral facial interference was greater in patients with SSD than in healthy controls (p = 0.039). The IA of patients with SSD also showed a significant correlation with low-frequency HRV (p = 0.004) and high-frequency HRV (p = 0.007). Conclusion SSD patients showed more significant changes in IA when neutral facial interference was given. These results suggest that bodily awareness is more affected by emotionally ambiguous stimuli in SSD patients than in healthy controls.
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- 2024
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11. Cardiac interoception in the museum: A novel measure of experience.
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Stephenson, Emma S., Koltermann, Kenneth, Gang Zhou, and Stevens, Jennifer A.
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INTEROCEPTION ,GENERALIZED estimating equations ,BODY image ,HEART beat ,MOBILE apps - Abstract
Interoception is the perception of the body's internal signals in response to various external and internal stimuli. The present study uses a novel method adapted from the CARdiac Elevation Detection Task to examine cardiac interoception objectively and subjectively in a unique context--in the presence of art. Self-report questionnaires were used to measure subjective interoceptive awareness, subjective interoceptive accuracy, and aesthetic appreciation. For objective interoceptive accuracy and sensibility, a wearable device (Shimmer) measured heart rate (HR) and connected to a mobile application to prompt two questions: "Is your heart beating faster than usual?" and "How confident are you in your previous response?" Participants explored an art gallery for 40 minutes while the Shimmer measured their HR and randomly prompted them to answer the questions. Using a Generalized Estimating Equation model, interoceptive sensibility was not found to predict the odds of submitting a correct response. It was also found that art does not improve participants' perceptions of their HR. Finally, there was no relation between aesthetic appreciation and subjective or objective cardiac interoception. Despite lack of statistical significance, the current study's method presents an improved method by examining interoceptive accuracy in the moment under ecological conditions. To date, findings and methods used in interoception are inconsistent or flawed; the value in the current study lies in the development and demonstration of a method to examine how the environment influences the body and self-awareness across a wide variety of contexts, thereby offering a possible standardized measure of interoception for investigators to adopt. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Interoception as a function of hypnotizability during rest and a heartbeat counting task.
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Giusti, Gioia, Zelič, Žan, Callara, Alejandro Luis, Sebastiani, Laura, and Santarcangelo, Enrica L.
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INTEROCEPTION , *EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) , *COUNTING , *MENTAL illness , *RESEARCH personnel - Abstract
The hypnotizability‐related differences in morpho‐functional characteristics of the insula could at least partially account for the differences in interoceptive accuracy (IA) observed between high and low hypnotizable individuals (highs, lows). Our aim was to investigate interoceptive processing in highs, lows, and medium hypnotizable individuals (mediums), who represent most of the population, during a 10‐minute open eyes relaxation condition (Part 1) and three repetitions of consecutive 2‐minute open eyes, closed eyes, and heartbeat counting conditions, followed by a 2‐minute post‐counting condition (Part 2). Electrocardiogram and electroencephalogram were recorded in 14 highs, 14 mediums, and 18 lows, classified according to the Stanford Hypnotic Susceptibility Scale: Form A. Heartbeat‐evoked cortical potentials (HEP) were extracted throughout the entire session, and IA index was obtained for the heartbeat counting task (HCT). In Part 1, significant hypnotizability‐related differences were observed in the right central region in both early and late HEP components, with lows showing positive amplitudes and highs/mediums showing negative amplitudes. In Part 2, the same group differences were limited to the early component. Moreover, in the left frontal regions, only mediums modified their HEP during the counting task with respect to the open/closed eyes conditions, whereas highs displayed HEP differences between counting and post‐counting rest. HCT did not show significant group differences. In conclusion, highs and mediums seem to be more similar than mediums and lows regarding HEP, despite the absence of significant differences in HCT. Nonetheless, a negative correlation between hypnotizability scores and HEP amplitudes was observed in the regions showing group differences. The association between interoception and hypnotizability is a novel field within psychophysiology. It represents a promising approach to the study of the construction of consciousness and has potential clinical relevance. The peculiar psychophysiological correlates of hypnotizability, including interoceptive abilities, could indeed guide the choice of the most appropriate treatment of physical and mental diseases, for which alteration in interoceptive processing is an important etiological factor. Thus, the present findings may be relevant to both researchers and clinicians. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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13. Changes in interoceptive accuracy related to emotional interference in somatic symptom disorder.
- Author
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Lee, Deokjong, Kim, Se Joo, Cheon, Jooah, Jung, Young-Chul, and Kang, Jee In
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INTEROCEPTION ,SELF-expression ,HEART beat ,ABSOLUTE value - Abstract
Objective: The somatic symptom disorder (SSD) is characterized by one or more distressing or disabling somatic symptoms accompanied by an excessive amount of time, energy and emotion related to the symptoms. These manifestations of SSD have been linked to alterations in perception and appraisal of bodily signals. We hypothesized that SSD patients would exhibit changes in interoceptive accuracy (IA), particularly when emotional processing is involved. Methods: Twenty-three patients with SSD and 20 healthy controls were recruited. IA was assessed using the heartbeat perception task. The task was performed in the absence of stimuli as well as in the presence of emotional interference, i.e., photographs of faces with an emotional expression. IA were examined for correlation with measures related to their somatic symptoms, including resting-state heart rate variability (HRV). Results: There was no significant difference in the absolute values of IA between patients with SSD and healthy controls, regardless of the condition. However, the degree of difference in IA without emotional interference and with neutral facial interference was greater in patients with SSD than in healthy controls (p = 0.039). The IA of patients with SSD also showed a significant correlation with low-frequency HRV (p = 0.004) and high-frequency HRV (p = 0.007). Conclusion: SSD patients showed more significant changes in IA when neutral facial interference was given. These results suggest that bodily awareness is more affected by emotionally ambiguous stimuli in SSD patients than in healthy controls. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. No differences between remote and laboratory-based testing of cardiac interoceptive accuracy using the phase adjustment task
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Spooner, Ria, Bird, Jonathan M., Clemente, Rhea, Izagirre, Nerea Irigoras, Fueyo, Elisa Fernandez, Watling, Dawn, Plans, David, Brewer, Rebecca, Bird, Geoffrey, and Murphy, Jennifer
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- 2024
- Full Text
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15. Heart rate variability, interoceptive accuracy and functional connectivity in middle-aged and older patients with depression.
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Blickle, Manuel, Klüpfel, Catherina, Homola, György A., Gamer, Matthias, Herrmann, Martin J., Störk, Stefan, Gelbrich, Götz, Heuschmann, Peter U., Deckert, Jürgen, Pham, Mirko, and Menke, Andreas
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HEART beat , *OLDER patients , *DEFAULT mode network , *FUNCTIONAL connectivity , *MENTAL depression , *INTEROCEPTION - Abstract
Major depressive disorder (MDD) is associated with increased cardiac morbidity. Reduced heart rate variability (HRV) as well as lower interoceptive accuracy (IAc) have been observed in MDD as possible sympathomimetic mechanisms related to insula activity. The salience network (SN) anchored by the insula has been posited as a crucial functional network for cardiac sensations and the default mode network (DMN) for MDD. This study aimed to investigate the relation between insula-centered and depression-related brain networks, IAc and HRV in patients with depression as a possible mechanism by which MDD increases cardiac morbidity. 30 depressed inpatients and 30 healthy subjects (derived from the population-based "Characteristics and Course of Heart Failure Stages A-B and Determinants of Progression" cohort study, STAAB) all over 50 years were examined. HRV and IAc were assessed via electrocardiogram and a heartbeat perception task prior to a 3 T resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging. Seed-to-voxel resting-state functional connectivity (FC) analysis was conducted with six seeds in the insula and two seeds in the DMN. Depressed patients on the one hand showed decreased FC between insula cortex and frontal as well occipital cortical brain regions compared to controls. Depressed patients on the other hand exhibited higher FC between the medial prefrontal cortex and the insula cortex compared to controls. However, depressed patients did not differ in HRV nor in IAc compared to controls. Thus, differences in insula-related brain networks in depression in our study were not mirrored by differences in HRV and IAc. Future research is needed to define the mechanism by which depression increases cardiac morbidity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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16. Interoception: Where do we go from here?
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Murphy, Jennifer
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INTEROCEPTION , *INDIVIDUAL differences , *BODY image - Abstract
In recent years, there has been a significant rise in interest in interoception, the processing of internal bodily signals. This interest has been coupled by increased concerns regarding the measurement and conceptualisation of interoception. Focusing on cardiac interoceptive accuracy, I outline what I believe to be the most pressing issues in the field of interoception—specifically the continued reliance on the heartbeat counting task. I then provide an overview of what I believe to be more general limitations concerning how we measure and conceptualise individual differences in interoception and suggestions for a way forward. Specifically, I believe that by moving beyond single measurements, establishing optimal levels of interoceptive accuracy, and refocusing from accuracy to propensity, we may be able to uncover the real-life relevance of interoceptive abilities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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17. Cardiac interoception in the museum: A novel measure of experience
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Emma S. Stephenson, Kenneth Koltermann, Gang Zhou, and Jennifer A. Stevens
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interoceptive ability ,interoceptive accuracy ,cardiac interoception ,interoceptive awareness ,aesthetic appreciation ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Interoception is the perception of the body’s internal signals in response to various external and internal stimuli. The present study uses a novel method adapted from the CARdiac Elevation Detection Task to examine cardiac interoception objectively and subjectively in a unique context—in the presence of art. Self-report questionnaires were used to measure subjective interoceptive awareness, subjective interoceptive accuracy, and aesthetic appreciation. For objective interoceptive accuracy and sensibility, a wearable device (Shimmer) measured heart rate (HR) and connected to a mobile application to prompt two questions: “Is your heart beating faster than usual?” and “How confident are you in your previous response?” Participants explored an art gallery for 40 minutes while the Shimmer measured their HR and randomly prompted them to answer the questions. Using a Generalized Estimating Equation model, interoceptive sensibility was not found to predict the odds of submitting a correct response. It was also found that art does not improve participants’ perceptions of their HR. Finally, there was no relation between aesthetic appreciation and subjective or objective cardiac interoception. Despite lack of statistical significance, the current study’s method presents an improved method by examining interoceptive accuracy in the moment under ecological conditions. To date, findings and methods used in interoception are inconsistent or flawed; the value in the current study lies in the development and demonstration of a method to examine how the environment influences the body and self-awareness across a wide variety of contexts, thereby offering a possible standardized measure of interoception for investigators to adopt.
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Relationship Between Interoceptive Accuracy and Tactile Exploration Behavior
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H. Aso, H. Ishizuka, T. Hiraki, Y. Minagawa, and N. Miki
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Finger Scanning ,tactile exploration ,interoception ,interoceptive accuracy ,exteroception ,surface texture ,Electrical engineering. Electronics. Nuclear engineering ,TK1-9971 - Abstract
This paper presents a novel finding suggesting that tactile exploration behaviors, with a focus on finger scanning motion, are influenced by interoception. Initially, we investigated finger motion for surface scanning across various precisely controlled surface patterns using microfabrication techniques. Participants were then categorized into two distinct groups based on whether their finger scanning speed depended on surface patterns. Subsequently, we assessed participants’ interoception through a heart rate counting task. The identified groups correlated with levels of interoceptive accuracy, indicating a significant relationship between interoception and tactile-related behaviors. This discovery could have a profound impact on tactile research, as it suggests the need to consider interoception properties alongside conventional participant demographics such as age and gender in experimental design.
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- 2024
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19. Patients with postprandial distress syndrome experience problems with their interoceptive perceptual function to the gastric region, but their heartbeat perception is normal: a case control study
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Kohei Yoshida, Tetsuya Abe, Kenji Kanbara, Kento Ueda, Yukie Saka-Kouchi, and Hideaki Hasuo
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Postprandial distress syndrome ,Interoceptive accuracy ,Heartbeat tracking task ,Five-minute water load test ,Visceral hypersensitivity ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Abstract Background Visceral hypersensitivity in functional dyspepsia can be localized or widespread, and there is no simple method of assessment. Measuring interoceptive accuracy at different sites provides an assessment of perceptual hypersensitivity to specific ecological phenomena. The purpose of this study was to characterize visceral hypersensitivity by comparing gastric sensory and cardiac perceptual tests in patients with postprandial distress syndrome and in healthy volunteers. Methods Sixteen patients with postprandial distress syndrome (age = 47.5 ± 17.4, all female) and 16 healthy volunteers (age = 43.3 ± 16.1, all female) participated in the study after a six-hour fast. Each participant answered questionnaires about physical and mental quality of life, depression and anxiety, tendency of alexithymia, and somatosensory amplification. After completing the questionnaire, the participants took the heartbeat tracking task and the five-minute water load test. We performed statistical analysis using the Mann–Whitney U test and Spearman’s rank correlation coefficient. Results Subjects with postprandial distress syndrome had a lower drinking capacity than healthy volunteers (postprandial distress syndrome = 360.9 ± 170.0 mL, healthy volunteers = 644.1 ± 297 mL, P = 0.009), but there was no significant difference in the heartbeat perception score (postprandial distress syndrome = 0.599 ± 0.175, healthy volunteers = 0.623 ± 0.181, P = 0.647). There was a negative correlation (r = − 0.509, P
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- 2023
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20. On the relation between interoceptive attention and health anxiety: Distinguishing adaptive and maladaptive bodily awareness
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Dominic A. Trevisan, Sherab Tsheringla, and James C. McPartland
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interoceptive attention ,interoceptive accuracy ,anxiety ,health anxiety ,illness anxiety disorder ,alexithymia ,Psychology ,BF1-990 ,Neurophysiology and neuropsychology ,QP351-495 - Abstract
AbstractThe objectives of this study were to (1) demonstrate differences in the most common measures of interoceptive attention based on correlations with theoretically relevant emotional constructs, and (2) explore the interoceptive mechanisms contributing to health anxiety. Participants were 327 adults from the general population who completed a series of questionnaires on an online survey tool called Qualtrics. Associations among variables were ana-lyzed using simple correlations and a hierarchical multiple regression. The two most common measures of interoceptive attention were statistically unrelated to each other and had opposite patterns of relationships with measures of worry, health anxiety, and alexithymia. Results from a regression analysis suggest that an interoceptive profile of “high interoceptive attention” and “low interoceptive accuracy” is most predictive of health anxiety. Results suggest that there are “adaptive” and “maladaptive” forms of interoceptive attention that are captured by different measures of interoceptive attention. Researchers should choose measures of interoceptive attention carefully based on their own unique research needs. Findings about the interoceptive correlates of health anxiety may have implications for treatment of illness anxiety disorder.
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- 2023
- Full Text
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21. Patients with postprandial distress syndrome experience problems with their interoceptive perceptual function to the gastric region, but their heartbeat perception is normal: a case control study.
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Yoshida, Kohei, Abe, Tetsuya, Kanbara, Kenji, Ueda, Kento, Saka-Kouchi, Yukie, and Hasuo, Hideaki
- Subjects
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INTEROCEPTION , *MANN Whitney U Test , *PSYCHOLOGICAL distress , *VISCERAL pain - Abstract
Background: Visceral hypersensitivity in functional dyspepsia can be localized or widespread, and there is no simple method of assessment. Measuring interoceptive accuracy at different sites provides an assessment of perceptual hypersensitivity to specific ecological phenomena. The purpose of this study was to characterize visceral hypersensitivity by comparing gastric sensory and cardiac perceptual tests in patients with postprandial distress syndrome and in healthy volunteers. Methods: Sixteen patients with postprandial distress syndrome (age = 47.5 ± 17.4, all female) and 16 healthy volunteers (age = 43.3 ± 16.1, all female) participated in the study after a six-hour fast. Each participant answered questionnaires about physical and mental quality of life, depression and anxiety, tendency of alexithymia, and somatosensory amplification. After completing the questionnaire, the participants took the heartbeat tracking task and the five-minute water load test. We performed statistical analysis using the Mann–Whitney U test and Spearman's rank correlation coefficient. Results: Subjects with postprandial distress syndrome had a lower drinking capacity than healthy volunteers (postprandial distress syndrome = 360.9 ± 170.0 mL, healthy volunteers = 644.1 ± 297 mL, P = 0.009), but there was no significant difference in the heartbeat perception score (postprandial distress syndrome = 0.599 ± 0.175, healthy volunteers = 0.623 ± 0.181, P = 0.647). There was a negative correlation (r = − 0.509, P < 0.05) between drinking capacity and the heartbeat perception score in healthy volunteers, but no correlation in postprandial distress syndrome (r = − 0.156, P = 0.564). Heartbeat perception score did not correlate with psychological measures. Conclusions: Compared with healthy volunteers, only the five-minute water load test values were reduced in patients with postprandial distress syndrome, and no difference was observed in the heartbeat tracking task. Combining the 5-minute water load test and the heart rate tracking task revealed a lost cardiac-gastric perceptual relationship in patients with postprandial distress syndrome that was not observed in healthy volunteers, suggesting that there is hypersensitivity in gastric interoceptive perceptual function. Performing sensory examinations at two different sites may be useful in clarifying whether visceral hypersensitivity is localized. Trial registration: UMIN000057586. Registered11 March 2023(retrospectively registered). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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- View/download PDF
22. Interoception, alexithymia, and anxiety among individuals with alcohol use disorder.
- Author
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Wiśniewski, Paweł, Jakubczyk, Andrzej, Trucco, Elisa M., Kobyliński, Paweł, Suszek, Hubert, Zaorska, Justyna, Rydzewska, Małgorzata, and Kopera, Maciej
- Subjects
ALCOHOLISM ,INTEROCEPTION ,ALEXITHYMIA ,AFFECT (Psychology) ,EMOTION recognition ,BRIEF Symptom Inventory ,EMOTIONAL state - Abstract
Background: Interoception (i.e., the ability to recognize bodily signals), alexithymia (i.e., the inability to recognize emotional states) and negative affect (i.e., unpleasant feelings such as anxiety) have been associated with alcohol use disorder (AUD). Previous research suggests that interoception may underlie alexithymia, which in turn may be associated with negative affectivity. However, this remains to be empirically tested. This study investigates whether alexithymia mediates the association between interoception and anxiety and whether this association differs across individuals with AUD and a healthy control (HC) comparison group. Methods: The AUD group consisted of 99 participants enrolled in an 8-week abstinence-based inpatient treatment program. The HC group included 103 healthy individuals. The heartbeat counting task (HCT) was used to assess interoception (cardiac interoceptive accuracy). The Toronto Alexithymia Scale (TAS-20) was used to assess alexithymia. The Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI) was used to assess anxiety. Results: The moderated mediation model with interoception as the predictor, alexithymia as the mediator, and negative affect (i.e., state anxiety) as the dependent variable was tested. The analysis showed that the conditional indirect effect of interoception on anxiety via alexithymia was significant for individuals with AUD [ab = -0.300, bootstrap 95% CI = (-0.618, -0.088)], as well as for HCs [ab = -0.088, bootstrap 95% CI = (-0.195, -0.014)]; however, the conditional indirect effect significantly differed across HCs and individuals with AUD. Namely, the mediated effect was greater among individuals with AUD compared to the HC group. Conclusion: The results suggests that interoceptive impairment contributes to greater negative affect (i.e., state anxiety) via alexithymia especially for individuals with AUD. Improving emotion recognition via therapeutic methods focused on strengthening interoceptive abilities could improve outcomes for individuals receiving treatment for AUD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Cultural Differences in Interoceptive Accuracy: Comparison Between Japan and Europe1.
- Author
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Ubukata, Sakina, Watanabe, Katsumi, and Isomura, Tomoko
- Abstract
The self is, at least partially, grounded in bodily processing. In particular, processing the physiological state of the body (i.e., interoception) plays a key role in self‐consciousness and the first‐person experience. The present study examined cultural differences in interoceptive processing. We focused on a behavioral measure of cardiac processing, which was assessed using a heartbeat‐counting task; namely, interoceptive accuracy (IAcc). Study 1 compared IAcc scores that were previously collected in Japan and the United Kingdom and found no statistically significant differences between the cultures. Study 2 was conducted in a more elaborate manner; that is, we collected new data on IAcc from Japanese students using better‐adapted task instructions, as well as possible confounds that influence IAcc (i.e., time estimation, knowledge of heart rate, and actual heart rate). We compared these data with those collected from Belgian students and found that the Japanese participants detected heartbeats more accurately than did the Europeans. The results are discussed from the perspective of cultural differences in objective self‐awareness, and a self‐flexibility and a bodily precision account of IAcc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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24. Development and Validation of Japanese Versions of the Interoceptive Accuracy Scale and Interoceptive Attention Scale.
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Koike, Hikaru and Nomura, Michio
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- *
JAPANESE language , *COGNITION , *MENTAL health , *EMOTIONS , *STATISTICAL correlation - Abstract
Physical sensations arising from within the body are collectively referred to as interoception. This study aimed to develop and validate Japanese versions of the Interoceptive Accuracy Scale (IAS) and Interoceptive Attention Scale (IATS) that measure subjective indices of interoceptive accuracy and attention. To test our newly developed scales, we asked two groups of participants, 281 (Mage = 40.74, SDage = 8.75; 143 women, 137 men, 1 non-binary) and 395 (Mage = 40.69, SDage = 9.80; 203 women, 192 men), to complete a translated version of IAS and IATS studies, respectively. Both scales were found to have sufficient internal consistency and retest reliability. Correlations between physical sensation-related scales and IAS/IATS, as well as weak correlations between the IAS and IATS, were found to support construct validity of IAS and IATS. Finally, prospects for future studies based on these indices are discussed. Plain Language Summary: This study aimed to develop and validate Japanese versions of the Interoceptive Accuracy Scale (IAS-J) and Interoceptive Attention Scale (IATS-J), psychological scales assessing beliefs regarding interoception (physical sensation). As results of two studies, IAS-J and IATS-J were suggested to have good reliability and validity. IAS-J and IATS-J are expected to contribute to revealing complex relationships between interoception and various psychological variables, such as emotion, cognition, and mental health. In the future study, relationships between these subjective indices and behavioral indices of interoception should be carefully examined. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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25. What I see and what I feel: the influence of deceptive visual cues and interoceptive accuracy on affective valence and sense of effort during virtual reality cycling.
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Mouatt, Brendan, Smith, Ashleigh E., Parfitt, Gaynor, Stanford, Ty, McDade, Jeremy, Smith, Ross T., and Stanton, Tasha R.
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AFFECT (Psychology) ,ANAEROBIC threshold ,VIRTUAL reality ,CYCLING competitions - Abstract
Background. How we feel during exercise is influenced by exteroceptive (e.g., vision) and interoceptive (i.e., internal body signals) sensory information, and by our prior experiences and expectations. Deceptive visual cues about one's performance during exercise can increase work rate, without negatively impacting affective valence (good/bad responses) or perceived exertion. However, what is less understood is whether the perception of the exercise experience itself can be shifted, if work rate is held constant. Here we aimed to investigate whether deceptive vision--via illusory hills in a virtual reality (VR) cycling experience--alters affective valence and perceived exertion when physical effort is controlled. We also evaluated whether the accuracy with which one detects interoceptive cues influences the extent to which deceptive visual information can shift exercise experiences. Methods. A total of 20 participants (10 female; 30.2 ± 11.2 yrs) completed three VR cycling conditions each of 10-min duration, in a randomised, counterbalanced order. Pedal resistance/cadence were individualised (to exercise intensity around ventilatory threshold) and held constant across conditions; only visual cues varied. Two conditions provided deceptive visual cues about the terrain (illusory uphill, illusory downhill; resistance did not change); one condition provided accurate visual cues (flat terrain). Ratings of affective valence (Feeling Scale) and of perceived exertion (Borg's RPE) were obtained at standardised timepoints in each VR condition. Interoceptive accuracy was measured via a heartbeat detection test. Results. Linear mixed effects models revealed that deceptive visual cues altered affective valence (f² = 0.0198). Relative to flat terrain, illusory downhill reduced affective valence (Est = -0.21, p = 0.003), but illusory uphill did not significantly improve affective valence (Est = 0.107, p = 0.14). Deceptive visual cues altered perceived exertion, and this was moderated by the level of interoceptive accuracy (Condition-Interoception interaction, p = 0.00000024, f² = 0.0307). Higher levels of interoceptive accuracy resulted in higher perceived exertion in the illusory downhill condition (vs flat), while lower interoceptive accuracy resulted in lower perceived exertion in both illusory hill conditions (vs flat) and shifts of greater magnitude. Conclusions. Deceptive visual cues influence perceptual responses during exercise when physical effort does not vary, and for perceived exertion, the weighting given to visual exteroceptive cues is determined by accuracy with which interoceptive cues are detected. Contrary to our hypotheses, deceptive visual cues did not improve affective valence. Our findings suggest that those with lower levels of interoceptive accuracy experience most benefit from deceptive visual cues, providing preliminary insight into individualised exercise prescription to promote positive (and avoid negative) exercise experiences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Cultural Differences in Interoceptive Accuracy: Comparison Between Japan and Europe1.
- Author
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Ubukata, Sakina, Watanabe, Katsumi, and Isomura, Tomoko
- Abstract
The self is, at least partially, grounded in bodily processing. In particular, processing the physiological state of the body (i.e., interoception) plays a key role in self‐consciousness and the first‐person experience. The present study examined cultural differences in interoceptive processing. We focused on a behavioral measure of cardiac processing, which was assessed using a heartbeat‐counting task; namely, interoceptive accuracy (IAcc). Study 1 compared IAcc scores that were previously collected in Japan and the United Kingdom and found no statistically significant differences between the cultures. Study 2 was conducted in a more elaborate manner; that is, we collected new data on IAcc from Japanese students using better‐adapted task instructions, as well as possible confounds that influence IAcc (i.e., time estimation, knowledge of heart rate, and actual heart rate). We compared these data with those collected from Belgian students and found that the Japanese participants detected heartbeats more accurately than did the Europeans. The results are discussed from the perspective of cultural differences in objective self‐awareness, and a self‐flexibility and a bodily precision account of IAcc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. The impact of interoceptive accuracy and stimulation type on the out-of-body experience.
- Author
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Ma, Ke, Yang, Liping, and Hommel, Bernhard
- Subjects
- *
SYNCHRONIC order , *COUNTING - Abstract
People tend to perceive a virtual body standing in front of them as their own if it is either stroked or moving synchronously with their own real body—the out-of-body experience (OBE). We combined synchrony manipulation with two other factors of theoretical interest: the kind of stimulation, visuotactile stimuli or visuomotor correlations, being synchronised and the interoceptive accuracy (IA) of participants, assessed by means of the heartbeat counting task. Results showed that explicit measures of embodiment were systematically affected by synchrony, and this synchrony effect was more pronounced for visuomotor than for visuotactile conditions. The walking drift was affected by IA: In visuotactile conditions, the synchrony effect was pronounced in individuals with low IA, presumably reflecting a stronger impact of the visual information. In visuomotor conditions, however, the synchrony effect was stronger in individuals with high IA, presumably reflecting a stronger impact of re-afferent information generated by the participants' own movements. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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28. Dissociating cognitive and affective empathy across psychopathy dimensions: The role of interoception and alexithymia.
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Campos, Carlos, Barbosa Rocha, Nuno, and Barbosa, Fernando
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INTEROCEPTION ,PSYCHOPATHY ,ALEXITHYMIA ,AFFECT (Psychology) ,EMPATHY ,BODY image - Abstract
This study examined the associations between psychopathy dimensions (triarchic phenotypes and classical factors), empathy domains (cognitive and affective), and interoception (interoceptive attention and accuracy) while accounting for the putative role of alexithymia. A community sample (n = 515) completed an online survey encompassing: Triarchic Psychopathy Measure (boldness, meanness, disinhibition); Levenson Self-Report Psychopathy Scale (primary and secondary psychopathy); Body Perception Questionnaire (interoceptive attention); Interoceptive Accuracy Scale; Toronto Alexithymia Scale. Hierarchical linear regression models were implemented for hypothesis-driven analyses examining the associations between psychopathy, empathy, and interoception while controlling for sex, age, and alexithymia. Exploratory path models were employed to investigate alexithymia and/or cognitive empathy as mediators between interoception and psychopathy. Our results largely confirmed the postulated empathy profiles across psychopathy dimensions, as meanness and primary psychopathy displayed a broad empathy impairment, while disinhibition and secondary psychopathy were only associated with diminished cognitive empathy. Importantly, boldness displayed a unique pattern (enhanced cognitive empathy and reduced affective empathy), further reinforcing its importance within the constellation of psychopathy traits. Contrary to our hypotheses, self-perceived interoceptive attention and accuracy were not associated with either psychopathy dimension after controlling for alexithymia. However, interoceptive accuracy and alexithymia were associated with cognitive empathy, while alexithymia was also positively related to all psychopathy dimensions (as expected), despite the unexpected strong and negative association with boldness. Exploratory analyses suggested significant indirect effects (mediation) between interoceptive accuracy and psychopathy via alexithymia and/or cognitive empathy. These mediating effects must be interpreted with caution and future studies should be designed to formally test this model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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29. Association of Hypnotizability, Interoception, and Emotion.
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Zelič, Žan, Sebastiani, Laura, and Santarcangelo, Enrica Laura
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BRAIN physiology ,THOUGHT & thinking ,AUTONOMIC nervous system ,HYPNOTISM ,SENSORY perception ,COGNITION ,INDIVIDUALIZED medicine ,PATHOLOGICAL psychology ,EMOTIONS ,PSYCHOLOGICAL distress - Abstract
The present scoping review reports the reciprocal relations between hypnotizability, interoception, and emotion. Brain morpho-functional differences may account for the lower interoceptive accuracy, higher interoceptive sensitivity, and different emotional strategies observed in highly hypnotizable participants with respect to medium-to-low hypnotizables. Since interoception is relevant to both physical and mental health and hypnotizability can predict both interoceptive abilities and the efficacy of interoception-based mental training, this allows for the development of new forms of treatment and rehabilitation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Effects of interoceptive accuracy on timing control in the synchronization tapping task.
- Author
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Kenta Tomyta, Kentaro Katahira, and Hideki Ohira
- Subjects
HEART beat ,SYNCHRONIZATION - Abstract
Humans often perform rhythmic synchronized movements. Professional musicians and dancers particularly perform such movement tasks well and have a higher interoceptive accuracy (IAcc) than non-musicians and nondancers. We thus hypothesized that rhythmic synchronized movements might be enhanced by a higher IAcc. To investigate this hypothesis, this study conducted a heartbeat counting task and a rhythmic synchronization tapping task with normal (easier) and slow (harder) tempi metronomes. Inconsistent with our hypothesis, however, a higher IAcc was negatively correlated with timing control, but only in the slow tempo condition [r (30) = 0.46, p < 0.05]. This suggests that a higher IAcc did not enhance timing control in rhythmic synchronized movements but rather weakened it, resting heart rate variability was not correlated with timing control. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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31. Interoception, alexithymia, and anxiety among individuals with alcohol use disorder
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Paweł Wiśniewski, Andrzej Jakubczyk, Elisa M. Trucco, Paweł Kobyliński, Hubert Suszek, Justyna Zaorska, Małgorzata Rydzewska, and Maciej Kopera
- Subjects
interoception ,interoceptive accuracy ,alexithymia ,negative affect ,alcohol use disorder ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
BackgroundInteroception (i.e., the ability to recognize bodily signals), alexithymia (i.e., the inability to recognize emotional states) and negative affect (i.e., unpleasant feelings such as anxiety) have been associated with alcohol use disorder (AUD). Previous research suggests that interoception may underlie alexithymia, which in turn may be associated with negative affectivity. However, this remains to be empirically tested. This study investigates whether alexithymia mediates the association between interoception and anxiety and whether this association differs across individuals with AUD and a healthy control (HC) comparison group.MethodsThe AUD group consisted of 99 participants enrolled in an 8-week abstinence-based inpatient treatment program. The HC group included 103 healthy individuals. The heartbeat counting task (HCT) was used to assess interoception (cardiac interoceptive accuracy). The Toronto Alexithymia Scale (TAS-20) was used to assess alexithymia. The Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI) was used to assess anxiety.ResultsThe moderated mediation model with interoception as the predictor, alexithymia as the mediator, and negative affect (i.e., state anxiety) as the dependent variable was tested. The analysis showed that the conditional indirect effect of interoception on anxiety via alexithymia was significant for individuals with AUD [ab = −0.300, bootstrap 95% CI = (−0.618, −0.088)], as well as for HCs [ab = −0.088, bootstrap 95% CI = (−0.195, −0.014)]; however, the conditional indirect effect significantly differed across HCs and individuals with AUD. Namely, the mediated effect was greater among individuals with AUD compared to the HC group.ConclusionThe results suggests that interoceptive impairment contributes to greater negative affect (i.e., state anxiety) via alexithymia especially for individuals with AUD. Improving emotion recognition via therapeutic methods focused on strengthening interoceptive abilities could improve outcomes for individuals receiving treatment for AUD.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. A novel analysis of interoceptive underpinnings of anxious psychopathology in COVID-19 survivors.
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D'Orsi, Greta, Palladini, Mariagrazia, Mazza, Mario Gennaro, Rovere-Querini, Patrizia, Scalabrini, Andrea, and Benedetti, Francesco
- Subjects
- *
IMPACT of Event Scale , *MEAN platelet volume , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *STATE-Trait Anxiety Inventory , *HOSPITAL admission & discharge , *INTEROCEPTION - Abstract
SARS-CoV-2 affects brain, body, and their interchange. We investigated interoceptive mechanisms in COVID-19 survivors focusing on their potential link with psychopathology and inflammatory biomarkers. We assessed interoceptive accuracy (IAc) and time-perceiving (TA) skills of 57 COVID-19 survivors one month after hospital discharge through, respectively, a heartbeats perception task and a time duration task. Each participant was assessed about his interoceptive awareness (IAw) through Multidimensional Assessment of Interoceptive Awareness questionnaire (MAIA) and then, screened for post-traumatic (Impact of Events Scale – IES-R), anxious (State-Trait Anxiety Inventory – STAI-Y1) and depressive (Zung Self-Rating Depression Scale - ZSDS; Beck Depression Inventory - BDI-13) symptoms. Biomarkers of inflammation (platelet count, PC; mean platelet volume, MPV and systemic immune-inflammation index, SII) were obtained in a subsample of 40 survivors by a blood sampling conducted at admission and discharge time from the hospital. Correlational, GLM, GLMZ, and mediation analyses were performed. IAc did not correlate with TA confirming the reliability of interoceptive measure. IAc positively predicts MAIA's Trusting subscale and negatively predicts anxious psychopathology which fully mediates the effect of IAc on Trusting.PC at hospital admission predicts anxiety at one month after recovery. Again, a higher decrease of SII during hospitalization predicts higher IAc skill and lower anxiety state at one month. The link between SII change and anxiety is fully mediated by IAc. Our results unveil a potential key role of interoception and brain-body interchange in the exacerbation and maintenance of anxiety psychopathology in COVID-19 survivors. • Interoceptive abnormal functioning post SARS-2 coronavirus infection. • Interoceptive accuracy and awareness predict COVID-19 survivors' anxious symptoms. • Interoceptive accuracy and trusting in own's body interplay is disrupted by anxiety. • The link between SII decrease and anxiety is mediated by interoceptive accuracy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
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33. Interoception and Premonitory Urges in Children and Adolescents With Tic Disorders
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Christina Schütteler, Katrin Woitecki, Manfred Döpfner, and Alexander L. Gerlach
- Subjects
heartbeat ,muscle ,emg ,interoceptive accuracy ,predictive coding ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
[Background] Compared to healthy controls (HCs), adult Tic Disorder (TD) patients exhibit a lower interoceptive accuracy (IAcc) in heartbeat perception. Since the lower IAcc is not evident in children, the age at which tics develop, but in adults only (Pile et al., 2018, https://doi.org/10.1007/s10803-018-3608-8), lower IAcc may reflect a pathological mechanism relevant with regard to tics, premonitory urges (PUs) or the resulting impairment. Although tics are a motor phenomenon, up to date, IAcc has been assessed only with a heartbeat-counting task. This study aims at comparing cardiac and muscular IAcc using two different paradigms and investigates how IAcc is related to premonitory urges in youth. [Method] Interoceptive measures (heartbeat-counting task, muscle tension paradigm) of 28 youth with TD were compared to 23 control participants and related to self-rated premonitory urges and tic symptoms. [Results] TD patients did not differ from HCs in any IAcc measures. However, within TD patients, IAcc explained additional variance in PUs when controlling for tic severity. Muscular IAcc in TD patients is related to urges and tics, but the direction of this association is unclear. IAcc is lower in TD patients than in HCs, indicating imprecise sensory input which is more easily overcome by priors within the predictive coding framework. [Conclusions] Muscle tension feedback tasks could extend interoceptive trainings aimed at improving IAcc to improve accuracy of urge perception (more precise sensory input) to foster the ability to control tics via HRT. Longitudinal studies could provide further insights in causal relationships between IAcc, premonitory urges and tics.
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- 2023
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34. On the relation between interoceptive attention and health anxiety: Distinguishing adaptive and maladaptive bodily awareness.
- Author
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Trevisan, Dominic A., Tsheringla, Sherab, and McPartland, James C.
- Subjects
- *
INTEROCEPTION , *HYPOCHONDRIA , *ANXIETY , *ATTENTION - Abstract
The objectives of this study were to (1) demonstrate differences in the most common measures of interoceptive attention based on correlations with theoretically relevant emotional constructs, and (2) explore the interoceptive mechanisms contributing to health anxiety. Participants were 327 adults from the general population who completed a series of questionnaires on an online survey tool called Qualtrics. Associations among variables were ana-lyzed using simple correlations and a hierarchical multiple regression. The two most common measures of interoceptive attention were statistically unrelated to each other and had opposite patterns of relationships with measures of worry, health anxiety, and alexithymia. Results from a regression analysis suggest that an interoceptive profile of "high interoceptive attention" and "low interoceptive accuracy" is most predictive of health anxiety. Results suggest that there are "adaptive" and "maladaptive" forms of interoceptive attention that are captured by different measures of interoceptive attention. Researchers should choose measures of interoceptive attention carefully based on their own unique research needs. Findings about the interoceptive correlates of health anxiety may have implications for treatment of illness anxiety disorder. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Interoceptive accuracy correlates with precision of time perception in the millisecond range.
- Author
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Maki Uraguchi, Maulina, Venie Viktoria Rondang, and Hideki Ohira
- Subjects
INTEROCEPTION ,TIME perception ,SIGNAL detection ,TIMEKEEPING - Abstract
It has been proposed that accuracy in time perception is related to interoceptive accuracy and vagal activity. However, studies investigating time perception in the supra-second range have provided mixed results, and few studies have investigated the sub-second range. Moreover, there is a lack of studies investigating the relationship between precision in time perception and interoceptive accuracy. A recent meta-analytic review of neuroimaging studies proposed a dynamic interaction between two types of timing processing--an endogenous time keeping mechanism and the use of exogenous temporal cues. Interoceptive accuracy may affect both accuracy and precision of primary temporal representations, as they are generated based on the endogenous time keeping mechanism. Temporal accuracy may vary when adapted to the environmental context. In contrast, temporal precision contains some constant noise, which may maintain the relationship with interoceptive accuracy. Based on these assumptions, we hypothesized that interoceptive accuracy would be associated with temporal precision in the sub-second range, while vagal activity would be associated with temporal accuracy. We used the temporal generalization task, which allowed us to calculate the indices of temporal accuracy and temporal precision in line with the existing research, and also compute the index of participants' sensitivity according to the signal detection theory. Specifically, we investigated whether (1) interoceptive accuracy would correlate with temporal accuracy, temporal precision, or sensitivity and (2) resting-state vagal activity would correlate with temporal accuracy, temporal precision, or sensitivity. The results indicated that interoceptive accuracy was positively correlated with temporal precision as well as sensitivity, but not with temporal accuracy, in the sub-second range time perception. Vagal activity was negatively correlated only with sensitivity. Furthermore, we found a moderation effect of sensitivity on the relationship between vagal activity and perceived duration, which affected the association between vagal activity and temporal accuracy. These findings suggest the importance of precision as an aspect of time perception, which future studies should further explore in relation to interoception and vagal activity, and of the moderation effects of factors such as participants' sensitivity in this context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Discrepancies in the Definition and Measurement of Human Interoception: A Comprehensive Discussion and Suggested Ways Forward.
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Desmedt O, Luminet O, Maurage P, and Corneille O
- Subjects
- Humans, Interoception physiology
- Abstract
Interoception has been the subject of renewed interest over the past 2 decades. The involvement of interoception in a variety of fundamental human abilities (e.g., decision-making and emotional regulation) has led to the hypothesis that interoception is a central transdiagnostic process that causes and maintains mental disorders and physical diseases. However, interoception has been inconsistently defined and conceptualized. In the first part of this article, we argue that the widespread practice of defining interoception as the processing of signals originating from within the body and limiting it to specific physiological pathways (lamina I spinothalamic afferents) is problematic. This is because, in humans, the processing of internal states is underpinned by other physiological pathways generally assigned to the somatosensory system. In the second part, we explain that the consensual dimensions of interoception are empirically detached from existing measures, the latter of which capture loosely related phenomena. This is detrimental to the replicability of findings across measures and the validity of interpretations. In the general discussion, we discuss the main insights of the current analysis and suggest a more refined way to define interoception in humans and conceptualize its underlying dimensions.
- Published
- 2025
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- View/download PDF
37. Impact of Cardiac Interoception on the Self-Prioritization Effect.
- Author
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Tatsuru Honda and Takashi Nakao
- Subjects
INTEROCEPTION ,HEART beat ,INFORMATION processing ,STIMULUS & response (Psychology) - Abstract
Self-relevant information is processed faster and more accurately than non-self-relevant information. Such a bias is developed even for newly associated information with the self, which is also known as the self-prioritization effect (SPE). Interoception, which refers to the overall processing of information from within the body, is crucial for self-relevant processing; however, its role in SPE remains unexplored. In this study, we investigated the relationship between the magnitude of SPE and interoceptive accuracy (IAc), defined as one’s ability to accurately perceive one’s own interoceptive state. Additionally, to explore the causal relationship, we measured SPE by presenting self- or other-relevant stimuli based on the participant’s cardiac cycle in the shape-label matching task. We demonstrated that IAc was negatively correlated with the magnitude of SPE in terms of discrimination of the relevance of the stimuli. In addition, a correlation was observed only when the stimuli were presented during cardiac systole. Furthermore, IAc was negatively correlated with the processing of self-relevant stimuli but not with other-relevant stimuli. Collectively, our results show that individuals with higher IAc have relatively lower discriminative sensitivity to newly and temporary associated self-relevant stimuli presented during the accentuation of cardiac interoceptive information. Although SPE is a phenomenon in which newly selfassociated stimuli are preferentially processed, our results suggest that individuals with higher IAc prioritized processing interoceptive information over temporarily associated self-relevant external information. Conversely, previous studies using paradigms other than the shape-label matching paradigm with familiar self-relevant stimuli, such as selfface, reported that interoceptive information enhances the processing of self-relevant stimuli. Whether interoceptive information enhances the processing of external self-relevant information may depend on the familiarity with the self-relevant stimuli and the experimental paradigm. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Effects of interoceptive training on decision making, anxiety, and somatic symptoms
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Ayako Sugawara, Yuri Terasawa, Ruri Katsunuma, and Atsushi Sekiguchi
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Interoceptive training ,Interoceptive accuracy ,Rationality ,Decision making ,Anxiety ,Somatic symptoms ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Abstract Background Interoception is the perception of afferent information that arises from any point within the body. Individual differences in interoception have been associated with affective processing and decision-making processing. The somatic marker hypothesis summarizes the potential effects of interoception on decision-making processes. According to this theory, individuals with interoceptive dysfunction exhibit disadvantageous decision making. Recently, enhancement of interoceptive accuracy, an element of interoception assessed by objective decision-making tasks, has been demonstrated using biofeedback. Garfinkle et al. developed an interoceptive training task, modified from the heartbeat perception task, which enhanced interoceptive accuracy and reduced anxiety symptoms. The purpose of this study was to determine the effects of interoceptive training on decision-making processes. Based on improvements in interoceptive accuracy, we hypothesized that decision-making scores would change in a manner indicative of increased rationality. Methods This longitudinal interventional study was performed with interoceptive training. Before and after the intervention, interoceptive accuracy and rationality of decision-making processes were assessed using a heartbeat perception task and rational decision-making tasks, respectively. Fourteen healthy volunteers (nine women; mean age, 21.9 ± 4.5 years) participated. The analysis included data from 12 participants. To detect individual differences in the effects of interoceptive accuracy on rationality of decision making, correlation analysis was conducted on change ratios of the indices of interoceptive accuracy and rationality of decision making. Results Interoceptive training resulted in significant enhancement of interoceptive accuracy scores and significant reductions in somatic symptom and state anxiety scores. In contrast, interoceptive training did not cause significant changes in decision-making indices. There was a significant positive correlation between change ratios of indices of interoceptive accuracy and rationality of decision making. Conclusions The results suggested a causal relation between interoception and rationality of decision making. These findings will enhance the understanding of mechanisms underlying alterations of decision-making related to psychotherapy by focusing on interoception. Trial registration Trial registration number: UMIN000037548 .
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- 2020
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39. Intranasal Oxytocin Improves Interoceptive Accuracy and Heartbeat-Evoked Potentials During a Cardiac Interoceptive Task.
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Zhou M, Cheng L, Zhou Y, Zhu S, Zhang Y, Kendrick KM, and Yao S
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- Humans, Male, Double-Blind Method, Young Adult, Adult, Electrocardiography drug effects, Brain drug effects, Brain physiology, Oxytocin administration & dosage, Oxytocin pharmacology, Interoception drug effects, Interoception physiology, Administration, Intranasal, Heart Rate drug effects, Heart Rate physiology, Electroencephalography drug effects, Evoked Potentials drug effects, Evoked Potentials physiology
- Abstract
Background: Interoception represents perception of the internal bodily state, which is closely associated with social/emotional processing and physical health in humans. Understanding the mechanism that underlies interoceptive processing, particularly its modulation, is therefore of great importance. Given the overlap between oxytocinergic pathways and interoceptive signaling substrates in both peripheral visceral organs and the brain, intranasal oxytocin administration is a promising approach for modulating interoceptive processing., Methods: Using a double-blind, placebo-controlled, between-participant design, we recruited 72 healthy male participants who performed a cardiac interoceptive task during electroencephalograph and electrocardiograph recording to examine whether intranasal administration of the neuropeptide oxytocin could modulate interoceptive processing. We also collected data in a resting state to examine whether we could replicate previous findings., Results: The results showed that in the interoceptive task, oxytocin increased interoceptive accuracy at the behavioral level, which was paralleled by larger heartbeat-evoked potential amplitudes in frontocentral and central regions on the neural level. However, there were no significant effects of oxytocin on electroencephalograph or electrocardiograph during resting state., Conclusions: These findings suggest that oxytocin may only have a facilitatory effect on interoceptive processing under task-based conditions. Our findings not only provide new insights into the modulation of interoceptive processing via targeting the oxytocinergic system but also provide proof-of-concept evidence for the therapeutic potential of intranasal oxytocin in mental disorders with dysfunctional interoception., (Copyright © 2024 Society of Biological Psychiatry. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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40. The influence of cardiac synchronisation on self-attribution to external objects in male participants.
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Shibata H, Harada T, and Ohira H
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Interoception, the representation of our bodily state derived from physiological signals, is fundamental to our sense of self. Previous studies using cardiac feedback paradigms demonstrated interoceptive effects on self-perception. However, it remains unclear whether interoceptive information can extend self-attribution to non-bodily objects. This study aimed to elucidate whether cardiac signals can induce self-attribution to non-bodily objects and how interoceptive accuracy modulates this effect. A total of 44 male volunteers participated in an emotion assignment task where they viewed images of palms (bodily targets) and spheres (non-bodily targets) flashing in or out of sync with their heartbeat and assigned emotional images (positive/negative) to these targets. A heartbeat discrimination task was used to measure the interoceptive accuracy. The results showed no significant effect of synchronisation on emotion assignment for either the target type or the valence of the emotional images. However, participants with high interoceptive accuracy attributed both positive and negative images more to synchronised targets than those with low interoceptive accuracy. These findings suggest that although cardiac synchronisation may not uniformly facilitate the self-attribution of external objects, interoceptive accuracy may mediate attention to synchrony. Future studies should explore the conditions under which cardiac signals influence self-attribution., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest. The author(s) declared that they were an editorial board member of Frontiers, at the time of submission. This had no impact on the peer review process and the final decision., (Copyright © 2024 Shibata, Harada and Ohira.)
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- 2024
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41. Sex differences in interoceptive accuracy: A meta-analysis.
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Prentice, Freya and Murphy, Jennifer
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INTEROCEPTION , *MENTAL health , *SAMPLE size (Statistics) , *PHYSICAL training & conditioning - Abstract
• Sex differences in interoceptive accuracy are reported, but results are mixed. • This meta-analysis sought to confirm the presence or absence of sex differences. • Poor cardiac accuracy on counting and discrimination tasks was observed in females. • Effects were less stable for non-cardiac due to varied methods and sample sizes. • Results were mixed for respiratory, and no differences were observed for gastric. Interoceptive accuracy, the ability to correctly perceive internal signals arising from the body, is thought to be disrupted in numerous mental and physical health conditions. Whilst evidence suggests poorer interoceptive accuracy in females compared to males, raising the possibility that interoceptive differences may relate to sex differences in mental and physical health, results concerning sex differences in interoceptive accuracy are mixed. Given such ambiguity, this meta-analysis aimed to establish the presence or absence of sex differences in interoceptive accuracy across cardiac, respiratory, and gastric domains. A review of 7956 abstracts resulted in 93 eligible studies. Results demonstrated superior accuracy in males across cardiac, but not gastric, tasks, while findings on respiratory tasks were mixed. Effect sizes were consistent across cardiac tasks, but instability and/or moderate heterogeneity was observed across other domains, likely due to the small number of eligible studies. Despite such limitations, results indicate the possibility of sex differences across interoception tasks and domains. Methodological limitations concerning the influence of physiological factors, and directions for future research are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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42. Interactions between interoception and perspective-taking: Current state of research and future directions.
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Baiano, Chiara, Job, Xavier, Santangelo, Gabriella, Auvray, Malika, and Kirsch, Louise P.
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PERSPECTIVE taking , *INTEROCEPTION , *MEDICAL research , *THEORY of mind - Abstract
• Interoception and perspective-taking contribute to our interaction with the external world. • Interoception and perspective-taking are both embodied processes sharing some functional neural networks. • Interoception may be relevant for emotional aspects of perspective-taking, which influence the ability to empathise with others. • Interoceptive information may be important for aspects of perspective-taking requiring embodied mental transformations. • The interactions between interoception and perspective-taking have implications for future research and potential clinical applications. Interoception, the sense of the physiological state of the body, and perspective-taking, the ability to take another's point of view, are two fundamental components contributing to our perception and interaction with the external world. However, whether the perception of our inner body influences how we perceive the external world and other people remains poorly understood. Here, we review recent behavioural and neuroimaging evidence investigating the links between dimensions of interoception (i.e., accuracy, sensibility and awareness) and perspective-taking (i.e., affective, cognitive and visual). So far, only a limited subset of these dimensions has been investigated together and the results suggest that interoceptive abilities may only interact with perspective-taking when embodied mental transformations are required. Furthermore, mainly the emotional aspects of perspective-taking are related to interoception, influencing the ability to empathise with others. Future research should systematically investigate the links between all dimensions of interoception and perspective-taking to provide full understanding of the specific role interoception has on how we perceive the world and take another's point of view. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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43. Atypical interoception as a common risk factor for psychopathology: A review.
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Brewer, Rebecca, Murphy, Jennifer, and Bird, Geoffrey
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INTEROCEPTION , *COGNITIVE ability ,PSYCHIATRIC research - Abstract
[Display omitted] • Reviews evidence that atypical interoception is observed across multiple disorders. • Interoception is associated with performance in fundamental domains of functioning. • Interoception is associated with cross-disorder symptomology. • Argues that interoception may be a common vulnerability for psychopathology. • Outstanding questions for future research are outlined. The inadequacy of a categorial approach to mental health diagnosis is now well-recognised, with many authors, diagnostic manuals and funding bodies advocating a dimensional, trans-diagnostic approach to mental health research. Variance in interoception, the ability to perceive one's internal bodily state, is reported across diagnostic boundaries, and is associated with atypical functioning across symptom categories. Drawing on behavioural and neuroscientific evidence, we outline current research on the contribution of interoception to numerous cognitive and affective abilities (in both typical and clinical populations), and describe the interoceptive atypicalities seen in a range of psychiatric conditions. We discuss the role that interoception may play in the development and maintenance of psychopathology, as well as the ways in which interoception may differ across clinical presentations. A number of important areas for further research on the role of interoception in psychopathology are highlighted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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44. Physical activity and interoceptive processing: Theoretical considerations for future research.
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Wallman-Jones, Amie, Perakakis, Pandelis, Tsakiris, Manos, and Schmidt, Mirko
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INTEROCEPTION , *PHYSICAL activity , *SENSORY stimulation , *PATIENT monitoring , *AFFERENT pathways , *MENTAL health - Abstract
Interoception, defined as the sense of the internal bodily state, plays a critical role in physical, cognitive, emotional and social well-being. Regarding physical well-being, contemporary models of exercise regulation incorporate interoceptive processes in the regulation of physical exertion. Top-down processes continuously monitor the physiological condition of the body to ensure allostasis is maintained, however, flagged perturbations also appear to influence these higher order processes in return. More specifically, enhancing one's physiological arousal by means of physical activity is a viable way of manipulating the afferent input entering the interoceptive system, appearing to optimise the integration of early sensory stimulation with later affective responses. Despite this, the relationship between physical activity and top-down regulation is underrepresented in interoceptive research. We here address this gap by integrating findings from different disciplines to support the overlapping mechanisms, with the hope of stimulating further research in this field. Developing our understanding of how interoceptive processes are shaped by physical activity could hold significant clinical implications considering the impact of interoceptive deficits to mental health and well-being. • Interoceptive processes monitor the condition of the body during physical activity. • Physical activity manipulates the afferent input entering the interoceptive system. • There is an underrepresentation of physical activity in interoceptive research. • An interdisciplinary approach should be encouraged in future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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45. Cardiac Interoception: A Novel Signal Detection Approach and Relations to Somatic Symptom Distress.
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Pohl, Anna, Hums, Anna-Clara, Kraft, Gina, Köteles, Ferenc, Gerlach, Alexander L., and Witthöft, Michael
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INTEROCEPTION , *SIGNAL detection , *STIMULUS & response (Psychology) , *BODY image , *SYMPTOMS , *MENTAL health - Abstract
Interoception is essential for the maintenance of physical and mental health. Paradigms assessing cardioceptive accuracy do not separate sensitivity from bias or are very demanding. We present the piloting (study 1; N = 60) and psychometric evaluation and validation (study 2; N = 84) of a novel task for the assessment of cardiac interoceptive perception following the principles of signal detection theory. By disentangling sensitivity and response bias, we demonstrate that the previously used interoceptive accuracy score of the heartbeat mental tracking task represents an amalgam of sensitivity and response bias. The new task demonstrated adequate test–retest reliabilities for sensitivity (d′) and response bias (c). Sensitivity was inversely related (β = −.36) to somatic symptom distress after statistically controlling for response bias. The novel cardiovascular signal detection task is easy to implement, feasible, and promising in terms of unraveling the role of (cardiac) interoceptive perception in psychopathology. Public Significance Statement: The ability to perceive one's own bodily signals appears crucial for our emotional and physical well-being. Changes in this ability are assumed to contribute to mental disorders and chronic somatic symptoms (e.g., chronic pain). In two studies, we present a novel task for an improved assessment of body perception as a starting point for a better understanding of mental disorders and their effective treatment in the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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46. Delving into the relationship between regular physical exercise and cardiac interoception in two cross-sectional studies.
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Yoris, Adrián E., Cira, Luis F., Luque-Casado, Antonio, Salvotti, Caterina, Tajadura-Jiménez, Ana, Avancini, Chiara, Zarza-Rebollo, Juan Antonio, Sanabria, Daniel, and Perakakis, Pandelis
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- *
INTEROCEPTION , *CROSS-sectional method , *CARDIOVASCULAR fitness , *PHYSICAL activity , *PHYSICAL fitness - Abstract
Cardiac interoception, the ability to sense and process cardiac afferent signals, has been shown to improve after a single session of acute physical exercise. However, it remains unclear whether repetitive engagement in physical exercise over time leads to long-term changes in cardiac interoceptive accuracy. It is also unknown whether those changes affect the neural activity associated with the processing of afferent cardiac signals, assessed by the heart-evoked potential (HEP). In this study, we aimed to investigate this hypothesis through two cross-sectional studies, categorizing participants as active or inactive based on physical fitness (Study I; N = 45) or self-reported physical activity levels (Study II; N = 60). Interoception was assessed at rest using the HEP (Studies I and II), the Heartbeat Counting task (Study II), and the Rubber Hand Illusion (RHI) (Study II). Study I showed strong evidence of better cardiovascular fitness in the active group than in the inactive group as well as robust between-group differences in electrocardiogram (ECG) recordings. Study 2 replicated the clear differences in ECG as a function of regular physical activity. Those results were expected due to clear differences in physical activity habits. In contrast, our analysis revealed no robust differences between groups across cardiac interoception tasks and the RHI, although the direct relevance of these measures to interoception remains under investigation. In sum, our results do not provide convincing evidence to support a strong version of the notion that regular physical exercise is associated with an enhanced in cardiac interoception. • Exercise did not significantly correlate with cardiac interoception measures (HEP, HBC, RHI). • ECG readings showed notable variances between high-fit and low-fit individuals, aligning with prior research. • Results suggest exercise may not significantly enhance cardiac interoception. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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47. Beyond interoceptive accuracy: New directions in interoception research.
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Desmedt, Olivier and Van den Bergh, Omer
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INTEROCEPTION - Published
- 2024
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48. Seeing Through Each Other’s Hearts: Inferring Others’ Heart Rate as a Function of Own Heart Rate Perception and Perceived Social Intelligence
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Arslanova, Irena, Galvez-Pol, Alejandro, Kilner, James, Finotti, Gianluca, and Tsakiris, Manos
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- 2022
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49. Sense it and use it: interoceptive accuracy and sensibility in suicide ideators
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Thomas Forkmann, Eftychia Volz-Sidiropoulou, Trientje Helbing, Barbara Drüke, Verena Mainz, Dajana Rath, Siegfried Gauggel, and Tobias Teismann
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Suicide ideation ,Subjective interoception ,Objective interoception ,Heartbeat perception ,Interoceptive accuracy ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
Abstract Background Interoceptive deficits have been found to be associated with suicidal ideation and behavior. However, an objective measure of interoceptive accuracy has not been investigated in participants with suicide ideation, by now. This study aimed at investigating interoceptive accuracy and sensibility in persons with and without suicide ideation (SI) while controlling for severity of depressive symptoms. Method Ninety-five participants (age: M = 34.8, SD = 11.6, n = 56 female [58.9%]; n = 51 patients with a Major Depressive Disorder and n = 44 healthy participants) were assessed for interoceptive accuracy and sensibility, depression and SI. Results Twenty-five participants (26%) reported SI. They showed interoceptive accuracy comparable to persons without SI (t = −.81, p = .422), but significantly lower interoceptive sensibility. After controlling for severity of depressive symptoms in a hierarchical linear regression analysis, most associations between interoceptive sensibility and SI disappeared. Conclusion Results suggest that suicide ideators do not lack the ability to perceive their own bodily signals but they feel less able to use them in a way that is advantageous for them. Differences between suicide ideators and non-ideators appear to be largely driven by depressive symptoms (depression bias).
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- 2019
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50. Understanding the capture of exogenous attention by disgusting and fearful stimuli: The role of interoceptive accuracy.
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Mendoza-Medialdea, María Teresa and Ruiz-Padial, Elisabeth
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INTEROCEPTION , *AVERSION , *STIMULUS & response (Psychology) , *EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) , *ATTENTION , *COLLEGE students - Abstract
The aim of the study was to explore the role of interoceptive accuracy (IA) on exogenous attention to disgusting and fearful distractors of a main concurrent task. Participants were thirty university students previously identified as high (N = 16) or normal IA according their performance in a heartbeat detection task. Event-related potentials and behavioural responses were recorded. The results showed that disgusting stimuli capture exogenous attention in a first stage as reflected by the augmented amplitude of the P100 component of the ERPs in high IA participants. Fearful distractors may capture attention in a later moment in all participants as revealed by a marginally significant effect on the amplitude of N200. At behavioural level, disgusting distractors provoked a higher number of errors than neutral in normal IA participants. The time course of the effect of disgust and fearful eliciting distractors on exogenous attention appeared to depend on the individual characteristic of participants. • Interoceptive accuracy modulates the time course of exogenous attention to disgust. • Capture of exogenous attention by disgust reflected by augmented amplitude of P100. • Capture of exogenous attention by fear reflected by augmented amplitude of N200. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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