Litcius/Paper detail

A heartbeat away from a valid tracking task. An empirical comparison of the mental and the motor tracking task

János Körmendi, Eszter Ferentzi, Ferenc Köteles

2022Biological Psychology22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Individuals' ability to perceive their heartbeats, called cardioceptive accuracy, is assessed with various paradigms. Performance in the mental and a novel motor tracking task that eliminates disturbing tactile sensations was assessed at rest and during walking with the participation of 45 young people. Significantly higher scores in the mental tracking task than in the motor tracking task were found. Scores obtained at rest were consistently higher than their walking counterparts. Motor responses showed no temporal association with heartbeats for 84% of participants at rest and 95% during walking. Overall, participants' cardioceptive accuracy at rest and under slight physical activity was poor. Even if people rely on their heartbeat-related sensations during their daily activity, it is either not the ability that is assessed by the tracking tasks, or it is a relatively poor source of information about the actual state of the body.

Topics & Concepts

Tracking (education)HeartbeatTask (project management)Rest (music)PsychologyPhysical medicine and rehabilitationAssociation (psychology)Cognitive psychologyComputer scienceMedicineEconomicsManagementCardiologyPsychotherapistComputer securityPedagogyPsychosomatic Disorders and Their TreatmentsAnxiety, Depression, Psychometrics, Treatment, Cognitive ProcessesNeural and Behavioral Psychology Studies