Attention, in and out: Scalp-level and intracranial EEG correlates of interoception and exteroception

Interoception, the monitoring of visceral signals, is often presumed to engage attentional mechanisms specifically devoted to inner bodily sensing. In fact, most standardized interoceptive tasks require directing attention to internal signals. However, most studies in the field have failed to compar...

Descripción completa

Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: García-Cordero, I., Esteves, S., Mikulan, E.P., Hesse, E., Baglivo, F.H., Silva, W., García, M.C., Vaucheret, E., Ciraolo, C., García, H.S., Adolfi, F., Pietto, M., Herrera, E., Legaz, A., Manes, F., García, A.M., Sigman, M., Bekinschtein, T.A., Ibáñez, A., Sedeño, L.
Formato: JOUR
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_16624548_v11_nJUL_p_GarciaCordero
Aporte de:
id todo:paper_16624548_v11_nJUL_p_GarciaCordero
record_format dspace
spelling todo:paper_16624548_v11_nJUL_p_GarciaCordero2023-10-03T16:28:43Z Attention, in and out: Scalp-level and intracranial EEG correlates of interoception and exteroception García-Cordero, I. Esteves, S. Mikulan, E.P. Hesse, E. Baglivo, F.H. Silva, W. García, M.C. Vaucheret, E. Ciraolo, C. García, H.S. Adolfi, F. Pietto, M. Herrera, E. Legaz, A. Manes, F. García, A.M. Sigman, M. Bekinschtein, T.A. Ibáñez, A. Sedeño, L. Exteroception Heart evoked potential Interoception Interoceptive learning Intracranial recordings adult aged amygdala Article attention basal interoception controlled study correlation analysis electroencephalography event related potential evoked response exteroception female functional connectivity heartbeat evoked potential human human experiment inferior frontal gyrus information processing interoception male normal human oscillation perception post feedback interoception posterior insula somatosensory cortex task performance Interoception, the monitoring of visceral signals, is often presumed to engage attentional mechanisms specifically devoted to inner bodily sensing. In fact, most standardized interoceptive tasks require directing attention to internal signals. However, most studies in the field have failed to compare attentional modulations between internally- and externally-driven processes, thus probing blind to the specificity of the former. Here we address this issue through a multidimensional approach combining behavioral measures, analyses of event-related potentials and functional connectivity via high-density electroencephalography, and intracranial recordings. In Study 1, 50 healthy volunteers performed a heartbeat detection task as we recorded modulations of the heartbeat-evoked potential (HEP) in three conditions: exteroception, basal interoception (also termed interoceptive accuracy), and post-feedback interoception (sometimes called interoceptive learning). In Study 2, to evaluate whether key interoceptive areas (posterior insula, inferior frontal gyrus, amygdala, and somatosensory cortex) were differentially modulated by externally- and internally-driven processes, we analyzed human intracranial recordings with depth electrodes in these regions. This unique technique provides a very fine grained spatio-temporal resolution compared to other techniques, such as EEG or fMRI. We found that both interoceptive conditions in Study 1 yielded greater HEP amplitudes than the exteroceptive one. In addition, connectivity analysis showed that post-feedback interoception, relative to basal interoception, involved enhanced long-distance connections linking frontal and posterior regions. Moreover, results from Study 2 showed a differentiation between oscillations during basal interoception (broadband: 35-110 Hz) and exteroception (1-35 Hz) in the insula, the amygdala, the somatosensory cortex, and the inferior frontal gyrus. In sum, this work provides convergent evidence for the specificity and dynamics of attentional mechanisms involved in interoception. © 2017 García-Cordero, Esteves, Mikulan, Hesse, Baglivo, Silva, García, Vaucheret, Ciraolo, García, Adolfi, Pietto, Herrera, Legaz, Manes, García, Sigman, Bekinschtein, Ibáñez and Sedeño. JOUR info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_16624548_v11_nJUL_p_GarciaCordero
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic Exteroception
Heart evoked potential
Interoception
Interoceptive learning
Intracranial recordings
adult
aged
amygdala
Article
attention
basal interoception
controlled study
correlation analysis
electroencephalography
event related potential
evoked response
exteroception
female
functional connectivity
heartbeat evoked potential
human
human experiment
inferior frontal gyrus
information processing
interoception
male
normal human
oscillation
perception
post feedback interoception
posterior insula
somatosensory cortex
task performance
spellingShingle Exteroception
Heart evoked potential
Interoception
Interoceptive learning
Intracranial recordings
adult
aged
amygdala
Article
attention
basal interoception
controlled study
correlation analysis
electroencephalography
event related potential
evoked response
exteroception
female
functional connectivity
heartbeat evoked potential
human
human experiment
inferior frontal gyrus
information processing
interoception
male
normal human
oscillation
perception
post feedback interoception
posterior insula
somatosensory cortex
task performance
García-Cordero, I.
Esteves, S.
Mikulan, E.P.
Hesse, E.
Baglivo, F.H.
Silva, W.
García, M.C.
Vaucheret, E.
Ciraolo, C.
García, H.S.
Adolfi, F.
Pietto, M.
Herrera, E.
Legaz, A.
Manes, F.
García, A.M.
Sigman, M.
Bekinschtein, T.A.
Ibáñez, A.
Sedeño, L.
Attention, in and out: Scalp-level and intracranial EEG correlates of interoception and exteroception
topic_facet Exteroception
Heart evoked potential
Interoception
Interoceptive learning
Intracranial recordings
adult
aged
amygdala
Article
attention
basal interoception
controlled study
correlation analysis
electroencephalography
event related potential
evoked response
exteroception
female
functional connectivity
heartbeat evoked potential
human
human experiment
inferior frontal gyrus
information processing
interoception
male
normal human
oscillation
perception
post feedback interoception
posterior insula
somatosensory cortex
task performance
description Interoception, the monitoring of visceral signals, is often presumed to engage attentional mechanisms specifically devoted to inner bodily sensing. In fact, most standardized interoceptive tasks require directing attention to internal signals. However, most studies in the field have failed to compare attentional modulations between internally- and externally-driven processes, thus probing blind to the specificity of the former. Here we address this issue through a multidimensional approach combining behavioral measures, analyses of event-related potentials and functional connectivity via high-density electroencephalography, and intracranial recordings. In Study 1, 50 healthy volunteers performed a heartbeat detection task as we recorded modulations of the heartbeat-evoked potential (HEP) in three conditions: exteroception, basal interoception (also termed interoceptive accuracy), and post-feedback interoception (sometimes called interoceptive learning). In Study 2, to evaluate whether key interoceptive areas (posterior insula, inferior frontal gyrus, amygdala, and somatosensory cortex) were differentially modulated by externally- and internally-driven processes, we analyzed human intracranial recordings with depth electrodes in these regions. This unique technique provides a very fine grained spatio-temporal resolution compared to other techniques, such as EEG or fMRI. We found that both interoceptive conditions in Study 1 yielded greater HEP amplitudes than the exteroceptive one. In addition, connectivity analysis showed that post-feedback interoception, relative to basal interoception, involved enhanced long-distance connections linking frontal and posterior regions. Moreover, results from Study 2 showed a differentiation between oscillations during basal interoception (broadband: 35-110 Hz) and exteroception (1-35 Hz) in the insula, the amygdala, the somatosensory cortex, and the inferior frontal gyrus. In sum, this work provides convergent evidence for the specificity and dynamics of attentional mechanisms involved in interoception. © 2017 García-Cordero, Esteves, Mikulan, Hesse, Baglivo, Silva, García, Vaucheret, Ciraolo, García, Adolfi, Pietto, Herrera, Legaz, Manes, García, Sigman, Bekinschtein, Ibáñez and Sedeño.
format JOUR
author García-Cordero, I.
Esteves, S.
Mikulan, E.P.
Hesse, E.
Baglivo, F.H.
Silva, W.
García, M.C.
Vaucheret, E.
Ciraolo, C.
García, H.S.
Adolfi, F.
Pietto, M.
Herrera, E.
Legaz, A.
Manes, F.
García, A.M.
Sigman, M.
Bekinschtein, T.A.
Ibáñez, A.
Sedeño, L.
author_facet García-Cordero, I.
Esteves, S.
Mikulan, E.P.
Hesse, E.
Baglivo, F.H.
Silva, W.
García, M.C.
Vaucheret, E.
Ciraolo, C.
García, H.S.
Adolfi, F.
Pietto, M.
Herrera, E.
Legaz, A.
Manes, F.
García, A.M.
Sigman, M.
Bekinschtein, T.A.
Ibáñez, A.
Sedeño, L.
author_sort García-Cordero, I.
title Attention, in and out: Scalp-level and intracranial EEG correlates of interoception and exteroception
title_short Attention, in and out: Scalp-level and intracranial EEG correlates of interoception and exteroception
title_full Attention, in and out: Scalp-level and intracranial EEG correlates of interoception and exteroception
title_fullStr Attention, in and out: Scalp-level and intracranial EEG correlates of interoception and exteroception
title_full_unstemmed Attention, in and out: Scalp-level and intracranial EEG correlates of interoception and exteroception
title_sort attention, in and out: scalp-level and intracranial eeg correlates of interoception and exteroception
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_16624548_v11_nJUL_p_GarciaCordero
work_keys_str_mv AT garciacorderoi attentioninandoutscalplevelandintracranialeegcorrelatesofinteroceptionandexteroception
AT estevess attentioninandoutscalplevelandintracranialeegcorrelatesofinteroceptionandexteroception
AT mikulanep attentioninandoutscalplevelandintracranialeegcorrelatesofinteroceptionandexteroception
AT hessee attentioninandoutscalplevelandintracranialeegcorrelatesofinteroceptionandexteroception
AT baglivofh attentioninandoutscalplevelandintracranialeegcorrelatesofinteroceptionandexteroception
AT silvaw attentioninandoutscalplevelandintracranialeegcorrelatesofinteroceptionandexteroception
AT garciamc attentioninandoutscalplevelandintracranialeegcorrelatesofinteroceptionandexteroception
AT vaucherete attentioninandoutscalplevelandintracranialeegcorrelatesofinteroceptionandexteroception
AT ciraoloc attentioninandoutscalplevelandintracranialeegcorrelatesofinteroceptionandexteroception
AT garciahs attentioninandoutscalplevelandintracranialeegcorrelatesofinteroceptionandexteroception
AT adolfif attentioninandoutscalplevelandintracranialeegcorrelatesofinteroceptionandexteroception
AT piettom attentioninandoutscalplevelandintracranialeegcorrelatesofinteroceptionandexteroception
AT herrerae attentioninandoutscalplevelandintracranialeegcorrelatesofinteroceptionandexteroception
AT legaza attentioninandoutscalplevelandintracranialeegcorrelatesofinteroceptionandexteroception
AT manesf attentioninandoutscalplevelandintracranialeegcorrelatesofinteroceptionandexteroception
AT garciaam attentioninandoutscalplevelandintracranialeegcorrelatesofinteroceptionandexteroception
AT sigmanm attentioninandoutscalplevelandintracranialeegcorrelatesofinteroceptionandexteroception
AT bekinschteinta attentioninandoutscalplevelandintracranialeegcorrelatesofinteroceptionandexteroception
AT ibaneza attentioninandoutscalplevelandintracranialeegcorrelatesofinteroceptionandexteroception
AT sedenol attentioninandoutscalplevelandintracranialeegcorrelatesofinteroceptionandexteroception
_version_ 1782026132680343552