TY - JOUR
T1 - Disentangling interoception
T2 - Insights from focal strokes affecting the perception of external and internal milieus
AU - Couto, Blas
AU - Adolfi, Federico
AU - Sedeño, Lucas
AU - Salles, Alejo
AU - Canales-Johnson, Andrés
AU - Alvarez-Abut, Pablo
AU - Garcia-Cordero, Indira
AU - Pietto, Marcos
AU - Bekinschtein, Tristan
AU - Sigman, Mariano
AU - Manes, Facundo
AU - Ibanez, Agustin
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 Couto, Adolfi, Sedeño, Salles, Canales-Johnson, Alvarez-Abut, Garcia-Cordero, Pietto, Bekinschtein, Sigman, Manes and Ibanez.
PY - 2015
Y1 - 2015
N2 - Interoception is the moment-to-moment sensing of the physiological condition of the body. The multimodal sources of interoception can be classified into two different streams of afferents: an internal pathway of signals arising from core structures (i.e., heart, blood vessels, and bronchi) and an external pathway of body-mapped sensations (i.e., chemosensation and pain) arising from peripersonal space. This study examines differential processing along these streams within the insular cortex (IC) and their subcortical tracts connecting frontotemporal networks. Two rare patients presenting focal lesions of the IC (insular lesion, IL) or its subcortical tracts (subcortical lesion, SL) were tested. Internally generated interoceptive streams were assessed through a heartbeat detection (HBD) task, while those externally triggered were tapped via taste, smell, and pain recognition tasks. A differential pattern was observed. The IC patient showed impaired internal signal processing while the SL patient exhibited external perception deficits. Such selective deficits remained even when comparing each patient with a group of healthy controls and a group of brain-damaged patients. These outcomes suggest the existence of distinguishable interoceptive streams. Results are discussed in relation with neuroanatomical substrates, involving a fronto-insulo-temporal network for interoceptive and cognitive contextual integration.
AB - Interoception is the moment-to-moment sensing of the physiological condition of the body. The multimodal sources of interoception can be classified into two different streams of afferents: an internal pathway of signals arising from core structures (i.e., heart, blood vessels, and bronchi) and an external pathway of body-mapped sensations (i.e., chemosensation and pain) arising from peripersonal space. This study examines differential processing along these streams within the insular cortex (IC) and their subcortical tracts connecting frontotemporal networks. Two rare patients presenting focal lesions of the IC (insular lesion, IL) or its subcortical tracts (subcortical lesion, SL) were tested. Internally generated interoceptive streams were assessed through a heartbeat detection (HBD) task, while those externally triggered were tapped via taste, smell, and pain recognition tasks. A differential pattern was observed. The IC patient showed impaired internal signal processing while the SL patient exhibited external perception deficits. Such selective deficits remained even when comparing each patient with a group of healthy controls and a group of brain-damaged patients. These outcomes suggest the existence of distinguishable interoceptive streams. Results are discussed in relation with neuroanatomical substrates, involving a fronto-insulo-temporal network for interoceptive and cognitive contextual integration.
KW - Exteroception
KW - Interoception
KW - Interoceptive awareness
KW - Interoceptive sensitivity
KW - Lesion
KW - Peripersonal space
KW - Stroke
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84930939176&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00503
DO - 10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00503
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84930939176
SN - 1664-1078
VL - 6
JO - Frontiers in Psychology
JF - Frontiers in Psychology
IS - MAY
M1 - 503
ER -