by Katie Flood
January 11, 2024
from
TheConversation Website
This episode of The Conversation Weekly
was written and produced by Katie Flood,
with assistance from Mend Mariwany.
Sound design was by Eloise Stevens,
and
our theme music is by Neeta Sarl.
Gemma Ware is the executive producer.
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How good are
you at listening
to the signals
of your own body?
Your
Hand Please via Shutterstock
At every moment, your body's internal organs are sending signals to
your brain.
You'll be mostly unaware of them, but sometimes
they cut through:
for example when you're hungry, or when you
need to go to the bathroom.
Our ability to tap into these hidden signals is
called
interoception - sometimes known as a
sixth sense.
In this episode of The Conversation Weekly, we speak to a cognitive
neuroscientist and expert on interoception about how new
research on this connection between our minds and bodies could lead
to breakthroughs in mental and physical healthcare:
Interoception is defined as,
the unconscious or conscious sensing of
internal bodily sensations...
The concept was first proposed in the
early 20th century by a British neuroscientist called Charles
Sherrington, but it was largely ignored by researchers until around
ten years ago.
One of those leading the charge is Sarah Garfinkel, a
professor of cognitive neuroscience at University College London in
the UK.
When I first started, I would Google it and
there'd be no hits, or very few. No one was talking about it.
It's amazing to me to see how much has changed in those ten
years, and I'm excited to see that we're entering into an age of
neuroscience where we're looking at an integrated system
bringing in the body and the brain.
Most people probably aren't even aware of
interoception until they have a problem with it.
Garfinkel joked
that it wouldn't be very efficient if we were constantly distracted
by our beating heart, or if we had conscious insight into the
functioning of our kidneys all the time.
"Our brains have developed
a bias to be perceiving and aware of the external world," she
explains, which is why our exteroceptive senses such as sight,
hearing and touch dominate.
Garfinkel says interoception is important to accurately understand
what's going on in your body - particularly for people with
conditions such as autism, who often have difficulty knowing when to
eat.
But she believes our ability to read signals from our organs
can also shape our emotional experience.
I think of feelings as changes in bodily
states and our perceptions of them.
So (I'm) trying to
understand how different clinical conditions may have
differences either in the bodily signals themselves or the
sensing of these changes and how that might map onto different
emotion profiles.
She gives the example of post-traumatic stress
disorder (PTSD), suggesting it could be that increased bodily
activity, such as an elevated heart rate, interacts with the brain
to increase fear in people with PTSD.
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