
Interoception: Definition, Symptoms & How To Improve
Feb 19, 2025 · Interoception is your ability to feel sensations from within your body, like your heartbeat, hunger and a full bladder.
Interoception - Wikipedia
Interoception is the collection of senses providing information to the organism about the internal state of the body. [1][2] This can be both conscious and subconscious.
What you Need to Know about Interoception - The OT Toolbox
Sep 15, 2025 · Interoception, the ability to sense internal signals like hunger, heart rate, or the need to use the bathroom, is foundational to emotional health and mental well-being.
Interoception - Simply Psychology
Sep 16, 2025 · Interoception is the nervous system's capacity to sense and interpret the internal signals of the body.
The Emerging Science of Interoception: Sensing, Integrating ...
Interoception refers to the representation of an organism’s internal states, and includes the processes by which it senses, interprets, integrates, and regulates signals from within itself.
Interoception 101: How Do You Feel? - WebMD
May 15, 2025 · What Is Interoception? Interoception is how your brain senses and responds to what’s going on inside your body.
The Affective Side of Interoception - Psychology Today
3 days ago · All bodily feelings reflect a sixth sense we have called interoception. Explore its interesting idiosyncrasies and the role it plays in the brain's affective evaluation.
Making Sense of Interoception | Harvard Medicine Magazine
While the five commonly recognized senses — sight, hearing, touch, taste, and smell — help us understand the world around us, interoception processes information from the heart, gut, lungs, and …
Interoception · Open Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science
Sep 10, 2025 · Interoception refers to how the brain senses, consciously or unconsciously, physiological signals coming from inside the body. It includes a broad range of signals, mechanisms, and functions.
Interoception Explained: The Body’s Hidden Sixth Sense
Jan 22, 2026 · Interoception is the body’s hidden sixth sense, driven by Piezo proteins that monitor internal signals. New research links it to mental health and disease.