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Diet and Interoception (Adult Population)

The CNP Diet and Interoception Research Category consolidates research exploring the interconnected relationship between dietary intake and interoception. To view each original study on the open internet, click “Original.” To view the CNP-written abstract summary, click “CNP Summary.” While only some of the CNP-written abstract summaries are available below for free, all abstract summaries are available to CNP members through the CNP Library Membership. Interoception is one of the six elements characterizing the field of Nutritional Psychology. Interoception plays a significant role in developing our understanding of the Diet-Mental Health Relationship (DMHR). Referred to as “the eighth sense,” Interoception is our perception of the internal physiological state of our body. Interoception pertains to the receiving, encoding, and representation of internal bodily signals in the brain, as well as their perception (Ceunen et al., 2016). Interoception encompasses the non-conscious bodily signals we experience, and our conscious perception of them. NP 110: Introduction to Nutritional Psychology Methods includes curriculum in Diet and Interoception.

RESEARCH SUMMARIES

2016

Interoceptive awareness and its relationship to hippocampal dependent processes

2016

On the origin of interoception

CNP Research Summary can be found in the CNP Library Membership

2015

Individual differences in the interoceptive states of hunger, fullness and thirst

2015

Thirst interoception and its relationship to a Western-style diet

CNP Research Summary can be found in the CNP Library Membership

2018

The neurobiology of interoception in health and disease

2016

Western diet and the weakening of the interoceptive stimulus control of appetitive behavior

CNP Research Summary can be found in the CNP Library Membership

2017

A four-day Western-style dietary intervention causes reductions in hippocampal-dependent learning and memory and interoceptive sensitivity