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Journal article

Alexithymia: a general deficit of interoception.

Abstract:
Alexithymia is a sub-clinical construct, traditionally characterized by difficulties identifying and describing one's own emotions. Despite the clear need for interoception (interpreting physical signals from the body) when identifying one's own emotions, little research has focused on the selectivity of this impairment. While it was originally assumed that the interoceptive deficit in alexithymia is specific to emotion, recent evidence suggests that alexithymia may also be associated with difficulties perceiving some non-affective interoceptive signals, such as one's heart rate. It is therefore possible that the impairment experienced by those with alexithymia is common to all aspects of interoception, such as interpreting signals of hunger, arousal, proprioception, tiredness and temperature. In order to determine whether alexithymia is associated with selectively impaired affective interoception, or general interoceptive impairment, we investigated the association between alexithymia and self-reported non-affective interoceptive ability, and the extent to which individuals perceive similarity between affective and non-affective states (both measured using questionnaires developed for the purpose of the current study), in both typical individuals (n = 105 (89 female), mean age = 27.5 years) and individuals reporting a diagnosis of a psychiatric condition (n = 103 (83 female), mean age = 31.3 years). Findings indicated that alexithymia was associated with poor non-affective interoception and increased perceived similarity between affective and non-affective states, in both the typical and clinical populations. We therefore suggest that rather than being specifically associated with affective impairment, alexithymia is better characterized by a general failure of interoception.
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Publisher copy:
10.1098/rsos.150664

Authors


More by this author
Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
MSD
Department:
Experimental Psychology
Role:
Author


More from this funder
Funding agency for:
Bird, G
Grant:
AutismSpectrumDisordersgrant
Interoception


Publisher:
Royal Society
Journal:
Royal Society Open Science More from this journal
Volume:
3
Issue:
10
Pages:
150664
Publication date:
2016-10-01
Acceptance date:
2016-09-09
DOI:
ISSN:
2054-5703


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:672972
UUID:
uuid:d0b73d11-4828-4735-9dca-9c0dd6f13cd8
Local pid:
pubs:672972
Source identifiers:
672972
Deposit date:
2017-04-26

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