Breathing affects self‐other voice discrimination in a bodily state associated with somatic passivity

A growing number of studies have focused on identifying cognitive processes that are modulated by interoceptive signals, particularly in relation to the respiratory or cardiac cycle. Considering the fundamental role of interoception in bodily self‐consciousness, we here investigated whether interoce...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inPsychophysiology Vol. 59; no. 7; pp. e14016 - n/a
Main Authors Orepic, Pavo, Park, Hyeong‐Dong, Rognini, Giulio, Faivre, Nathan, Blanke, Olaf
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.07.2022
Wiley
John Wiley and Sons Inc
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:A growing number of studies have focused on identifying cognitive processes that are modulated by interoceptive signals, particularly in relation to the respiratory or cardiac cycle. Considering the fundamental role of interoception in bodily self‐consciousness, we here investigated whether interoceptive signals also impact self‐voice perception. We applied an interactive, robotic paradigm associated with somatic passivity (a bodily state characterized by illusory misattribution of self‐generated touches to someone else) to investigate whether somatic passivity impacts self‐voice perception as a function of concurrent interoceptive signals. Participants' breathing and heartbeat signals were recorded while they performed two self‐voice tasks (self‐other voice discrimination and loudness perception) and while simultaneously experiencing two robotic conditions (somatic passivity condition; control condition). Our data reveal that respiration, but not cardiac activity, affects self‐voice perception: participants were better at discriminating self‐voice from another person’s voice during the inspiration phase of the respiration cycle. Moreover, breathing effects were prominent in participants experiencing somatic passivity and a different task with the same stimuli (i.e., judging the loudness and not identity of the voices) was unaffected by breathing. Combining interoception and voice perception with self‐monitoring framework, these data extend findings on breathing‐dependent changes in perception and cognition to self‐related processing. Impact StatementThe contents of this page will be shown on the eTOC on the online version only. It will not be published as part of the article PDF. We combined psychophysics with robotics and voice‐morphing technology to evaluate the effect of breathing on self‐voice perception. Our results show that listeners better perceive their own voice during inspiration, an effect that is modulated by self‐related bodily processing. This extends previous findings documenting the effect of interoceptive signals on perception and suggests that the bodily self may serve as a scaffold for cognition.
Bibliography:Funding information
This research was supported by two donors advised by CARIGEST SA (Fondazione Teofilo Rossi di Montelera e di Premuda and a second one wishing to remain anonymous), by National Center of Competence in Research (NCCR) “Synapsy—The Synaptic Bases of Mental Diseases” grant number 51NF40‐185897, and by Bertarelli Foundation to O.B.
Nathan Faivre and Olaf Blanke contributed equally to this study.
ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
Funding informationThis research was supported by two donors advised by CARIGEST SA (Fondazione Teofilo Rossi di Montelera e di Premuda and a second one wishing to remain anonymous), by National Center of Competence in Research (NCCR) “Synapsy—The Synaptic Bases of Mental Diseases” grant number 51NF40‐185897, and by Bertarelli Foundation to O.B.
ISSN:0048-5772
1469-8986
1540-5958
DOI:10.1111/psyp.14016