Litcius/Paper detail

Sustained attention is related to heartbeat counting task performance but not to self-reported aspects of interoception and mindfulness

Luca Vig, Eszter Ferentzi, Ferenc Köteles

2021Consciousness and Cognition20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Although association between sustained attention and various aspects of interoception (i.e. the perception of the body state) seems plausible, research on this subject is scarce. In the present study, 74 undergraduate students (41 females; age: 22.3 ± 4.04 yrs) filled out the Body Awareness Questionnaire, the Mindful Attention Awareness Scale, and the Somatosensory Amplification Scale and completed the Heartbeat Counting Task (HCT), a sensory-perceptual measure of cardiac interoception and the PEBL Continuous Performance Test (CPT) assessing sustained attention. The HCT score showed a weak to moderate negative correlation with the number of commission errors shown in CPT, indicating a lack of response inhibition (frequentist analysis: rs = −0.313, p = 0.008; Bayesian analysis: τb = −0.216, BF10 = 5.865). Questionnaire measures did not show any connection with CPT-performance. These findings suggest that the subjective representation of attentiveness to bodily processes is unrelated to the objectively measured sustained attention. Response inhibition, however, is moderately related to HCT performance.

Topics & Concepts

InteroceptionPsychologyMindfulnessHeartbeatCognitive psychologyPerceptionCognitionAudiologyDevelopmental psychologyClinical psychologyNeuroscienceComputer scienceMedicineComputer securityPsychosomatic Disorders and Their TreatmentsPain Management and Placebo EffectAnxiety, Depression, Psychometrics, Treatment, Cognitive Processes