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      Interoception and Health : Psychological and Physiological Mechanisms

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          How do you feel--now? The anterior insula and human awareness.

          The anterior insular cortex (AIC) is implicated in a wide range of conditions and behaviours, from bowel distension and orgasm, to cigarette craving and maternal love, to decision making and sudden insight. Its function in the re-representation of interoception offers one possible basis for its involvement in all subjective feelings. New findings suggest a fundamental role for the AIC (and the von Economo neurons it contains) in awareness, and thus it needs to be considered as a potential neural correlate of consciousness.
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            Interoceptive predictions in the brain.

            Intuition suggests that perception follows sensation and therefore bodily feelings originate in the body. However, recent evidence goes against this logic: interoceptive experience may largely reflect limbic predictions about the expected state of the body that are constrained by ascending visceral sensations. In this Opinion article, we introduce the Embodied Predictive Interoception Coding model, which integrates an anatomical model of corticocortical connections with Bayesian active inference principles, to propose that agranular visceromotor cortices contribute to interoception by issuing interoceptive predictions. We then discuss how disruptions in interoceptive predictions could function as a common vulnerability for mental and physical illness.
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              Interoception and Mental Health: A Roadmap

              Interoception refers to the process by which the nervous system senses, interprets, and integrates signals originating from within the body, providing a moment-by-moment mapping of the body’s internal landscape across conscious and unconscious levels. Interoceptive signaling has been considered a component process of reflexes, urges, feelings, drives, adaptive responses, and cognitive and emotional experiences, highlighting its contributions to the maintenance of homeostatic functioning, body regulation, and survival. Dysfunction of interoception is increasingly recognized as an important component of different mental health conditions, including anxiety disorders, mood disorders, eating disorders, addictive disorders, and somatic symptom disorders. However, a number of conceptual and methodological challenges have made it difficult for interoceptive constructs to be broadly applied in mental health research and treatment settings. In November 2016, the Laureate Institute for Brain Research organized the first Interoception Summit, a gathering of interoception experts from around the world, with the goal of accelerating progress in understanding the role of interoception in mental health. The discussions at the meeting were organized around four themes: interoceptive assessment, interoceptive integration, interoceptive psychopathology, and the generation of a roadmap that could serve as a guide for future endeavors. This review article presents an overview of the emerging consensus generated by the meeting.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                ejh
                European Journal of Health Psychology
                Hogrefe Publishing
                2512-8442
                2512-8450
                January 14, 2021
                October 2020
                : 27
                : 4 , Special Issue: Interoception and Health: Psychological and Physiological Mechanisms
                : 127-131
                Affiliations
                [ 1 ]Clinical Psychology & Psychotherapy, Department of Psychology, Eberhard-Karls-University of Tübingen, Germany
                [ 2 ]Psychology School, University of Applied Sciences Fresenius, Munich, Germany
                [ 3 ]Health & Clinical Psychology, Institute of Psychology and Education, Ulm University, Germany
                [ 4 ]Department of Psychology, Psychological Assessment & Health Psychology, University of Konstanz, Germany
                [ 5 ]Department of Psychology and Human Movement Science, University of Hamburg, Germany
                Author notes
                Beate M. Herbert, Fabristraße 2, 89075 Ulm, Germany, E-mail beate.herbert@ 123456gmx.de
                Article
                ejh_27_4_127
                10.1027/2512-8442/a000064
                22cd93f4-6223-45bc-96f7-a869c54d19b6
                Copyright @ 2020
                History
                Categories
                Editorial

                Psychology,Health & Social care,Clinical Psychology & Psychiatry
                Psychology, Health & Social care, Clinical Psychology & Psychiatry

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