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Interoception is the body-to-brain axis of sensations that originates from the internal body and visceral organs. The Interoceptive Mind: From Homeostasis to Awareness offers a state-of-the-art overview of, and insights into, the role of interoception for mental life, awareness, subjectivity, affect, and cognition.
Sommario
- Part I: Introduction
- 1: Gary Berntson, Pete Gianaros and Manos Tsakiris: Interoception and the autonomic nervous system: Bottom-up meets top-down
- Part II: Mentalizing Interoception: Advances and Challenges
- 2: Micah Allen and Manos Tsakiris: The Body as First Prior: Interoceptive Predictive Processing and the Primacy of Self-Models
- 3: Mariana Babo-Rebelo and Catherine Tallon-Baudry: Interoceptive Signals, Brain Dynamics and Subjectivity
- 4: Marc Wittmann and Karin Meissner: The Embodiment of Time: How Interoception Shapes the Perception of Time
- 5: Qasim Aziz and James Ruffle: The Neurobiology of Gut Feelings
- 6: Mariana Von Mohr and Aikaterini Fotopoulou: The Cutaneous Borders of Interoception: Active and Social Inference on Pain and Pleasure on The Skin
- Part III: From Health to Disease: Interoception in Physical and Mental Health
- 7: Lisa Quadt, Hugo D Critchley and Sarah N. Garfinkel: Interoception and Emotion: Shared Mechanisms and Clinical Implications
- 8: Sahib S. Khalsa and Justin S. Feinstein: The Somatic Error Hypothesis of Anxiety
- 9: Beate M. Herbert and Olga Pollatos: The Relevance of Interoception for Eating Behavior and Eating Disorders
- 10: Adrián Yoris, Adolfo M. García, Paula Salamone, Lucas Sedeño, Indira García-Cordero and Agustín Ibáñez: Cardiac Interoception in Neurological Conditions and its Relevance for Dimensional Approaches
- 11: Omer Van den Bergh, Nadia Zacharioudakisn and Sibylle Petersen: Interoception, Categorization and Symptom Perception
- 12: Norman A. S. Farb and Kyle Logie: Interoceptive Appraisal and Mental Health
- Part IV: Towards a Philosophy of Interoception: Subjectivity and Experience
- 13: Giovanna Colombetti and Neil Harrison: From physiology to experience: enriching existing conceptions of "arousal" in affective science
- 14: Frederique de Vignemont: Was Descartes right after all? An affective background for bodily awareness
- 15: Andrew W. Corcoran and Jakob Hohwy: Allostasis, Interoception, and the Free Energy Principle: Feeling our Way Forward
- 16: Helena De Preester: Subjectivity as a Sentient Perspective and the Role of Interoception
- 17: Drew Leder: Inside Insight: A Phenomenology of Interoception
Info autore
Manos Tsakiris studied psychology and philosophy before completing his PhD (2006) in psychology and cognitive neurosciences at the Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, UCL. In 2007 he joined the Department of Psychology, Royal Holloway, University of London, where he is currently Professor of Psychology. His research is highly interdisciplinary and uses a wide range of methods to investigate the neurocognitive mechanisms that shape the experience of embodiment and self-identity. He is the recipient of the Young Mind and Brain Prize in 2014, of the 22nd Experimental Psychology Society Prize in 2015, and the NOMIS Foundation Distinguished Scientist Award in 2016.
Helena De Preester studied at Ghent University and Université Libre de Bruxelles before completing her PhD in philosophy at Ghent University. Previous research focused on subjectivity and embodiment, and on the tensions between transcendentalism and naturalism from the viewpoint of phenomenology and cognitive science. Her recent research focuses on body and subject in philosophy of technology. She is currently Professor of Philosophy at the School of Arts, University College Ghent, and visiting research professor at the department of Philosophy and Moral Science, Ghent University.
Riassunto
Interoception is the body-to-brain axis of sensations that originates from the internal body and visceral organs. The Interoceptive Mind: From Homeostasis to Awareness offers a state-of-the-art overview of, and insights into, the role of interoception for mental life, awareness, subjectivity, affect, and cognition.