| Literature DB >> 27211283 |
Ruben T Azevedo1,2, Salvatore Maria Aglioti1,2, Bigna Lenggenhager1.
Abstract
Mounting evidence suggests that interoceptive signals are fundamentally important for the experience of the self. Thus far, studies on interoception have mainly focused on the ability to monitor the timing of ongoing heartbeats and on how these influence emotional and self-related processes. However, cardiac afferent signalling is not confined to heartbeat timing and several other cardiac parameters characterize cardiodynamic functioning. Building on the fact that each heart has its own self-specific cardio-dynamics, which cannot be expressed uniquely by heart rate, we devised a novel task to test whether people could recognize the sound of their own heart even when perceived offline and thus not in synchrony with ongoing heartbeats. In a forced-choice paradigm, participants discriminated between sounds of their own heartbeat (previously recorded with a Doppler device) versus another person's heart. Participants identified the sound of their own heart above chance, whereas their metacognition of performance - as calculated by contrasting performance against ratings of confidence - was considerably poorer. These results suggest an implicit access to fine-grained neural representations of elementary cardio-dynamic parameters beyond heartbeat timing.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27211283 PMCID: PMC4876374 DOI: 10.1038/srep26545
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Experimental procedure: Before the experiment started, we recorded: (a) the sound of the participant’s heart using a Doppler device (main experiment); (b) and “beep” sounds triggered by the participant’s pulse waves measured with a pulse transducer (control experiment). After pre-processing, short samples of their own or another person’s heart sounds were presented, in random order. After each of the 30 trials, participants had to make a forced-choice decision about whether they had heard the sound of their own heartbeats or not, followed by a rating of their confidence in their decision.
Figure 2Results: (a) Percentage of participants grouped according to their performance in the sound recognition task; (b) Correlation between performance in the counting task and meta-awareness; (c) Correlation between performance in the counting task and performance in the sound recognition task.
Numbers and percentages of participants falling into the different groups in the experimental task.
| Group | Self | Non-discriminators | Other |
|---|---|---|---|
| Heartbeat | 17/27 (63%) | 7/27 (26%) | 3/27 (11%) |
| Beep | 3/16 (18.75%) | 11/16 (68.75%) | 2/16 (12.5%) |
Upper row using real heartbeat sound; lower row in the control task using R-wave evoked beep sounds.