4.4 Article

The heart rate discrimination task: A psychophysical method to estimate the accuracy and precision of interoceptive beliefs

Journal

BIOLOGICAL PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 168, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsycho.2021.108239

Keywords

Heart rate discrimination; Heartbeat tracking; Interoception; Psychophysics; Metacognition

Funding

  1. Lundbeckfonden Fellowship [R272-2017-4345]
  2. AIAS-COFUND II fellowship programme
  3. Marie Sklodowska-Curie actions under the European Union's Horizon 2020 [754513]
  4. Aarhus University Research Foundation
  5. European Research Council Starting Grant, under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme [948838]
  6. European Research Council (ERC) [948838] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)
  7. Marie Curie Actions (MSCA) [754513] Funding Source: Marie Curie Actions (MSCA)

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Interoception, the physiological sense of our inner bodies, has become a prominent research area in psychology and psychiatry. However, measuring accuracy in detecting cardiac signals has been challenging due to various limitations. In this study, researchers redefined subjective beliefs about heart rate as a crucial component of interoception and proposed a new psychophysical method to estimate their accuracy. The results showed that cardiac interoceptive beliefs were biased, less precise, and associated with poorer metacognitive insight. The open-source python package provided in this study offers a robust approach for quantifying cardiac beliefs.
Interoception -the physiological sense of our inner bodies -has risen to the forefront of psychological and psychiatric research. Much of this research utilizes tasks that attempt to measure the ability to accurately detect cardiac signals. Unfortunately, these approaches are confounded by well-known issues limiting their validity and interpretation. At the core of this controversy is the role of subjective beliefs about the heart rate in confounding measures of interoceptive accuracy. Here, we recast these beliefs as an important part of the causal machinery of interoception, and offer a novel psychophysical heart rate discrimination method to estimate their accuracy and precision. By applying this task in 223 healthy participants, we demonstrate that cardiac interoceptive beliefs are more biased, less precise, and are associated with poorer metacognitive insight relative to an exteroceptive control condition. Our task, provided as an open-source python package, offers a robust approach to quantifying cardiac beliefs.

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