4.2 Article

Reliability of the Heartbeat Tracking Task to Assess Interoception

Journal

APPLIED PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY AND BIOFEEDBACK
Volume 48, Issue 2, Pages 171-178

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s10484-022-09574-y

Keywords

Interoception; Cardioception; Counting tests; Heart rate

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Interoception refers to perceiving and interpreting internal sensations, and the heartbeat tracking task (HTT) is commonly used to assess interoception. However, there is a lack of reliability evidence for this measure, which may threaten interoception assessment. This study found that the HTT showed good relative reliability for interoceptive accuracy and moderate reliability for sensibility and awareness in healthy adults.
Interoception refers to the competence in perceiving and interpreting internal sensations emerging from the body. The most common approach to assess interoception is through cardiac interoceptive tests like the heartbeat tracking task (HTT), which measures the accuracy on perceive and counting heartbeats during a period. However, the literature is scarce in providing adequate reliability evidence for this measure so that the interoception assessment may be threaten. In addition to HTT accuracy, it is possible to determine sensibility (self-reported confidence) and interoceptive awareness (correspondence between accuracy and sensibility). Thus, we measured the test-retest reliability of HTT and also investigated the behavior of HTT outcomes along the task. Therefore, 31 healthy adults (16 males) with 27.8 (9.4) years old performed two consecutive HTT interspersed by one day. Intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC), standard error of measurement (SEM) and minimal detectable difference (MD) analyzes showed 'Good' relative reliability for interoceptive accuracy (ICC = 0.880; SEM = 0.263; MD = 0.728; p < 0.001) and 'Moderate' for sensibility (ICC = 0.617; SEM = 0.648; MD = 1.797; p < 0.001) and awareness (ICC = 0.593; SEM = 0.227; MD = 0.628; p < 0.001). The absolute reliability shows low threshold values for observing true effects in HTT outcomes. The results also showed that reducing the number of HTT blocks did not impact the outcomes. The HTT showed to be reliable in determine the interoceptive competences in healthy adults.

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