Taking the pulse of social cognition: Cardiac afferent activity and interoceptive accuracy modulate emotional egocentricity bias

At the heart of social cognition is our ability to distinguish between self and other and correctly attribute mental and affective states to their origin. Emotional egocentricity bias (EEB) reflects the tendency to use one's own emotional state when relating to others. Although interoception un...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cortex 2021-12, Vol.145, p.327-340
Hauptverfasser: von Mohr, Mariana, Finotti, Gianluca, Villani, Valerio, Tsakiris, Manos
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container_title Cortex
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creator von Mohr, Mariana
Finotti, Gianluca
Villani, Valerio
Tsakiris, Manos
description At the heart of social cognition is our ability to distinguish between self and other and correctly attribute mental and affective states to their origin. Emotional egocentricity bias (EEB) reflects the tendency to use one's own emotional state when relating to others. Although interoception underpins our emotional experience, little is known about its role on how we affectively relate to others. Here, we assessed how cardiac interoceptive impact, manipulated by presenting affective stimuli across different phases of the cardiac cycle coupled with trait-like levels of interoceptive accuracy, modulate the EEB. Individuals with higher interoceptive accuracy displayed an increased EEB when the other's emotional state was presented at the point of maximum interoceptive impact (i.e., at systole), whereas the reverse was observed for individuals with lower interoceptive accuracy. These findings show how interoceptive activity provides the physiological context within which we process other's emotional states in parallel to ours.
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source MEDLINE; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Baroreceptor firing
Egocentrism
Emotional egocentricity bias
Emotions
Heart Rate
Humans
Interoception
Self-other distinction
Social Cognition
title Taking the pulse of social cognition: Cardiac afferent activity and interoceptive accuracy modulate emotional egocentricity bias
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