Rhesus monkeys have an interoceptive sense of their beating hearts
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In: PNAS, Vol. 119, No. 16, e2119868119, 11.04.2022.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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T1 - Rhesus monkeys have an interoceptive sense of their beating hearts
AU - Charbonneau, Joey
AU - Maister, Lara
AU - Tsakiris, Manos
AU - Bliss-Moreau, Eliza
N1 - Press embargo until publication
PY - 2022/4/11
Y1 - 2022/4/11
N2 - The sensation of internal bodily signals, such as when your stomach is contracting or your heart is beating, plays a critical role in broad biological and psychological functions ranging from homeostasis to emotional experience and self-awareness. The evolutionary origins of this capacity and, thus, the extent to which it is present in nonhuman animals remain unclear. Here, we show that rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta) spend significantly more time viewing stimuli presented asynchronously, as compared to synchronously, with their heartbeats. This is consistent with evidence previously shown in human infants using a nearly identical experimental paradigm, suggesting that rhesus monkeys have a human-like capacity to integrate interoceptive signals from the heart with exteroceptive audiovisual information. As no prior work has demonstrated behavioral evidence of innate cardiac interoceptive ability in nonhuman animals, these results have important implications for our understanding of the evolution of this ability and for establishing rhesus monkeys as an animal model for human interoceptive function and dysfunction. We anticipate that this work may also provide an important model for future psychiatric research, as disordered interoceptive processing is implicated in a wide variety of psychiatric conditions.
AB - The sensation of internal bodily signals, such as when your stomach is contracting or your heart is beating, plays a critical role in broad biological and psychological functions ranging from homeostasis to emotional experience and self-awareness. The evolutionary origins of this capacity and, thus, the extent to which it is present in nonhuman animals remain unclear. Here, we show that rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta) spend significantly more time viewing stimuli presented asynchronously, as compared to synchronously, with their heartbeats. This is consistent with evidence previously shown in human infants using a nearly identical experimental paradigm, suggesting that rhesus monkeys have a human-like capacity to integrate interoceptive signals from the heart with exteroceptive audiovisual information. As no prior work has demonstrated behavioral evidence of innate cardiac interoceptive ability in nonhuman animals, these results have important implications for our understanding of the evolution of this ability and for establishing rhesus monkeys as an animal model for human interoceptive function and dysfunction. We anticipate that this work may also provide an important model for future psychiatric research, as disordered interoceptive processing is implicated in a wide variety of psychiatric conditions.
KW - Interoception
KW - awareness
KW - visceroception
KW - heartbeat
KW - rhesus monkey
U2 - 10.1073/pnas.2119868119
DO - 10.1073/pnas.2119868119
M3 - Article
VL - 119
JO - PNAS
JF - PNAS
SN - 0027-8424
IS - 16
M1 - e2119868119
ER -