All Relations between self-monitoring and interoception

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
Haichao Zhao, Ofir Turel, Antoine Bechara, Qinghua H. How distinct functional insular subdivisions mediate interacting neurocognitive systems. Cerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991). 2022-05-05. PMID:35511695. recent neurocognitive models propose that the insula serves as a hub of interoceptive awareness system, modulating 2 interplaying neurocognitive systems: the posterior insula (pi) receives and integrates various interoceptive signals; these signals are then transmitted to the anterior insula for processing higher-order representations into awareness, where the dorsal anterior insula (dai) modulates the prefrontal self-control system and the ventral anterior insula (vai) modulates the amygdala (amg)-striatal reward-seeking circuit. 2022-05-05 2023-08-13 Not clear
Henrik Walter, Anne Kausch, Lena Dorfschmidt, Lea Waller, Narges Chinichian, Ilya Veer, Kevin Hilbert, Ulrike Lüken, Martin P Paulus, Thomas Goschke, Johann D Kruschwit. Self-control and interoception: Linking the neural substrates of craving regulation and the prediction of aversive interoceptive states induced by inspiratory breathing restriction. NeuroImage. vol 215. 2021-02-19. PMID:32283274. moreover, during the self-control task, levels of interoceptive prediction were associated with connectivity in a spatially distributed network including among other areas the insula and regions of cognitive control, while during the interoceptive prediction task, levels of self-control were associated with connectivity in a spatially distributed network including among other regions the insula and presma. 2021-02-19 2023-08-13 Not clear
Nora D Volkow, Michael Michaelides, Ruben Bale. The Neuroscience of Drug Reward and Addiction. Physiological reviews. vol 99. issue 4. 2019-10-28. PMID:31507244. combined, these effects result in an enhanced motivation to "seek the drug" (energized by dopamine increases triggered by drug cues) and an impaired prefrontal top-down self-regulation that favors compulsive drug-taking against the backdrop of negative emotionality and an enhanced interoceptive awareness of "drug hunger." 2019-10-28 2023-08-13 Not clear
S Friedel, S L Whittle, N Vijayakumar, J G Simmons, M L Byrne, O S Schwartz, N B Alle. Dispositional mindfulness is predicted by structural development of the insula during late adolescence. Developmental cognitive neuroscience. vol 14. 2016-03-07. PMID:26209810. the involvement of insula development in mindfulness is consistent with a direct role for this structure in managing self-regulation, and in doing so concords with recent models of self-referential interoceptive awareness. 2016-03-07 2023-08-13 human
Carina Y Heitmann, Jutta Peterburs, Martin Mothes-Lasch, Marlit C Hallfarth, Stephanie Böhme, Wolfgang H R Miltner, Thomas Straub. Neural correlates of anticipation and processing of performance feedback in social anxiety. Human brain mapping. vol 35. issue 12. 2015-07-13. PMID:25099708. in line with the role of the medial prefrontal cortex in self-referential information processing and the insula in interoception, social anxiety seems to be associated with lower self-monitoring during feedback anticipation, and an increased self-focus and interoception during feedback presentation, regardless of feedback valence. 2015-07-13 2023-08-13 human
Kristina L McFadden, Jason R Tregellas, Megan E Shott, Guido K W Fran. Reduced salience and default mode network activity in women with anorexia nervosa. Journal of psychiatry & neuroscience : JPN. vol 39. issue 3. 2015-04-06. PMID:24280181. neuronal networks contributing to action selection, self-regulation and interoception could contribute to pathologic eating and body perception in people with anorexia nervosa. 2015-04-06 2023-08-12 Not clear
Qinghua He, Lin Xiao, Gui Xue, Savio Wong, Susan L Ames, Susan M Schembre, Antoine Bechar. Poor ability to resist tempting calorie rich food is linked to altered balance between neural systems involved in urge and self-control. Nutrition journal. vol 13. 2015-03-30. PMID:25228353. the loss of self-control or inability to resist tempting/rewarding foods, and the development of less healthful eating habits may be explained by three key neural systems: (1) a hyper-functioning striatum system driven by external rewarding cues; (2) a hypo-functioning decision-making and impulse control system; and (3) an altered insula system involved in the translation of homeostatic and interoceptive signals into self-awareness and what may be subjectively experienced as a feeling. 2015-03-30 2023-08-13 Not clear
Xavier Noël, Damien Brevers, Antoine Bechar. A triadic neurocognitive approach to addiction for clinical interventions. Frontiers in psychiatry. vol 4. 2014-06-24. PMID:24409155. according to the triadic neurocognitive model of addiction to drugs (e.g., cocaine) and non-drugs (e.g., gambling), weakened "willpower" associated with these behaviors is the product of an abnormal functioning in one or more of three key neural and cognitive systems: (1) an amygdala-striatum dependent system mediating automatic, habitual, and salient behaviors; (2) a prefrontal cortex dependent system important for self-regulation and forecasting the future consequences of a behavior; and (3) an insula dependent system for the reception of interoceptive signals and their translation into feeling states (such as urge and craving), which in turn plays a strong influential role in decision-making and impulse control processes related to uncertainty, risk, and reward. 2014-06-24 2023-08-12 Not clear
N D Volkow, G-J Wang, D Tomasi, R D Bale. Obesity and addiction: neurobiological overlaps. Obesity reviews : an official journal of the International Association for the Study of Obesity. vol 14. issue 1. 2013-02-01. PMID:23016694. the combined results suggest that both obese and drug-addicted individuals suffer from impairments in dopaminergic pathways that regulate neuronal systems associated not only with reward sensitivity and incentive motivation, but also with conditioning, self-control, stress reactivity and interoceptive awareness. 2013-02-01 2023-08-12 Not clear
Olga Pollatos, Jürgen Füstös, Hugo D Critchle. On the generalised embodiment of pain: how interoceptive sensitivity modulates cutaneous pain perception. Pain. vol 153. issue 8. 2012-12-11. PMID:22658270. individual differences in interoceptive sensitivity are associated with differences in reported intensity of emotional experience, vulnerability to anxiety and mood disorder and capacity for emotional self-regulation. 2012-12-11 2023-08-12 human