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Interoception: from homeostasis to self-awareness?

When:
Venue: Birkbeck Main Building, Malet Street

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Talk Title: Interoception: from homeostasis to self-awareness?

Abstract: Modern Psychology has long focused on the importance of the body as the basis of the self. However, this focus concerned the exteroceptive body, that is, the body as perceived from the outside, as when we recognise ourselves in the mirror. This influential approach has neglected another important dimension of the body, namely the interoceptive body, that is, the body as perceived from within, as for example when one feels her racing heart. In psychology, research on interception has focused mainly on its role in emotion. Recent research, however, has attempted to go beyond this approach, aiming instead to show how interception and interoceptive awareness serve the unity and stability of the self, analogous to the role of interoception in maintaining physiological homeostasis. My talk will consider such findings from studies on infants and adults as a means of going beyond the division between interoception and exteroception to consider their integration in self-awareness. This approach provides an alternative to existing psychological theories of the self insofar it goes beyond the apparent antagonism between the awareness of the self from the outside and from within, to consider their dynamic integration and inform us on how humans navigate the challenging balance between inside and out, in terms of both the individual's natural (interception vs. exteroception) and social (self vs. others) embodiment in the world.



A Reception Will follow after the Talk in the Rayne Seminar Room of the Henry Wellcome Building

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Contact phone: 2076316883