Neural correlates of heart-focused interoception: a functional magnetic resonance imaging meta-analysis

Author:

Schulz Stefan M.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology I, University of Würzburg, Marcusstrasse 9-11, 97070 Würzburg, Germany

2. Comprehensive Heart Failure Center Würzburg, University Hospital Würzburg, Straubmühlweg 2a, 97078 Würzburg, Germany

Abstract

Interoception is the ability to perceive one's internal body state including visceral sensations. Heart-focused interoception has received particular attention, in part due to a readily available task for behavioural assessment, but also due to accumulating evidence for a significant role in emotional experience, decision-making and clinical disorders such as anxiety and depression. Improved understanding of the underlying neural correlates is important to promote development of anatomical-functional models and suitable intervention strategies. In the present meta-analysis, nine studies reporting neural activity associated with interoceptive attentiveness (i.e. focused attention to a particular interoceptive signal for a given time interval) to one's heartbeat were submitted to a multilevel kernel density analysis. The findings corroborated an extended network associated with heart-focused interoceptive attentiveness including the posterior right and left insula, right claustrum, precentral gyrus and medial frontal gyrus. Right-hemispheric dominance emphasizes non-verbal information processing with the posterior insula presumably serving as the major gateway for cardioception. Prefrontal neural activity may reflect both top-down attention deployment and processing of feed-forward cardioceptive information, possibly orchestrated via the claustrum. This article is part of the themed issue ‘Interoception beyond homeostasis: affect, cognition and mental health’.

Funder

Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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