Interactions between visceral afferent signaling and stimulus processing

Visceral afferent signals to the brain influence thoughts, feelings and behaviour. Here we highlight the findings of a set of empirical investigations in humans concerning body-mind interaction that focus on how feedback from states of autonomic arousal shapes cognition and emotion. There is a lon...

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Main Authors: Hugo D Critchley, Sarah N Garfinkel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2015-08-01
Series:Frontiers in Neuroscience
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnins.2015.00286/full
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spelling doaj-0409beaa5f4140af853541b0786f88312020-11-25T01:24:58ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Neuroscience1662-453X2015-08-01910.3389/fnins.2015.00286153864Interactions between visceral afferent signaling and stimulus processingHugo D Critchley0Hugo D Critchley1Hugo D Critchley2Sarah N Garfinkel3Sarah N Garfinkel4University of SussexUniversity of SussexSussex Partnership NHS Foundation TrustUniversity of SussexUniversity of SussexVisceral afferent signals to the brain influence thoughts, feelings and behaviour. Here we highlight the findings of a set of empirical investigations in humans concerning body-mind interaction that focus on how feedback from states of autonomic arousal shapes cognition and emotion. There is a longstanding debate regarding the contribution of the body, to mental processes. Recent theoretical models broadly acknowledge the role of (autonomically-mediated) physiological arousal to emotional, social and motivational behaviours, yet the underlying mechanisms are only partially characterized. Neuroimaging is overcoming this shortfall; first, by demonstrating correlations between autonomic change and discrete patterns of evoked, and task-independent, neural activity; second, by mapping the central consequences of clinical perturbations in autonomic response and; third, by probing how dynamic fluctuations in peripheral autonomic state are integrated with perceptual, cognitive and emotional processes. Building on the notion that an important source of the brain’s representation of physiological arousal is derived from afferent information from arterial baroreceptors, we have exploited the phasic nature of these signals to show their differential contribution to the processing of emotionally-salient stimuli. This recent work highlights the facilitation at neural and behavioral levels of fear and threat processing that contrasts with the more established observations of the inhibition of central pain processing during baroreceptors activation. The implications of this body-brain-mind axis are discussed.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnins.2015.00286/fullEmotionsPerceptionPsychophysiologyAutonomicbaroreceptorcardiac cyle
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hugo D Critchley
Hugo D Critchley
Hugo D Critchley
Sarah N Garfinkel
Sarah N Garfinkel
spellingShingle Hugo D Critchley
Hugo D Critchley
Hugo D Critchley
Sarah N Garfinkel
Sarah N Garfinkel
Interactions between visceral afferent signaling and stimulus processing
Frontiers in Neuroscience
Emotions
Perception
Psychophysiology
Autonomic
baroreceptor
cardiac cyle
author_facet Hugo D Critchley
Hugo D Critchley
Hugo D Critchley
Sarah N Garfinkel
Sarah N Garfinkel
author_sort Hugo D Critchley
title Interactions between visceral afferent signaling and stimulus processing
title_short Interactions between visceral afferent signaling and stimulus processing
title_full Interactions between visceral afferent signaling and stimulus processing
title_fullStr Interactions between visceral afferent signaling and stimulus processing
title_full_unstemmed Interactions between visceral afferent signaling and stimulus processing
title_sort interactions between visceral afferent signaling and stimulus processing
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Neuroscience
issn 1662-453X
publishDate 2015-08-01
description Visceral afferent signals to the brain influence thoughts, feelings and behaviour. Here we highlight the findings of a set of empirical investigations in humans concerning body-mind interaction that focus on how feedback from states of autonomic arousal shapes cognition and emotion. There is a longstanding debate regarding the contribution of the body, to mental processes. Recent theoretical models broadly acknowledge the role of (autonomically-mediated) physiological arousal to emotional, social and motivational behaviours, yet the underlying mechanisms are only partially characterized. Neuroimaging is overcoming this shortfall; first, by demonstrating correlations between autonomic change and discrete patterns of evoked, and task-independent, neural activity; second, by mapping the central consequences of clinical perturbations in autonomic response and; third, by probing how dynamic fluctuations in peripheral autonomic state are integrated with perceptual, cognitive and emotional processes. Building on the notion that an important source of the brain’s representation of physiological arousal is derived from afferent information from arterial baroreceptors, we have exploited the phasic nature of these signals to show their differential contribution to the processing of emotionally-salient stimuli. This recent work highlights the facilitation at neural and behavioral levels of fear and threat processing that contrasts with the more established observations of the inhibition of central pain processing during baroreceptors activation. The implications of this body-brain-mind axis are discussed.
topic Emotions
Perception
Psychophysiology
Autonomic
baroreceptor
cardiac cyle
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnins.2015.00286/full
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