Body Awareness

Interoception: How Body Awareness Shapes Every Decision You Make

12 min read
Body Awareness 12 min read

You know the five senses. You may know proprioception — the sense of where your body is in space. You might even know the vestibular sense — balance and spatial orientation. But there's an eighth sense that neuroscience now considers foundational to everything from emotional intelligence to mental health to decision-making: interoception.

Interoception is the perception of internal body states — heartbeat, breath, gut activity, muscle tension, temperature, hunger, pain, and the thousands of subtle physiological signals that your body generates every second. It's the sense that tells you something "feels wrong" before you can articulate what it is. It's the foundation of gut feelings, emotional awareness, and the subjective experience of being alive in a body.

And the neuroscience behind it is reshaping how we understand the mind.

The Brain's Body-Sensing System

Interoceptive signals travel from organs and tissues throughout the body via two primary pathways. The vagus nerve carries information from the viscera — heart, lungs, gut, liver — to the nucleus of the solitary tract in the brainstem. Simultaneously, small-diameter afferent fibers (A-delta and C fibers) in the skin, muscles, and fascia carry signals about temperature, pain, itch, sensual touch, and tissue state through the spinal cord to the brain.

Both pathways converge on a single brain region: the posterior insular cortex. From there, interoceptive information flows forward through the insula to the anterior insular cortex (AIC), where it undergoes progressive integration with emotional, cognitive, and motivational data.

Neuroscientist A.D. (Bud) Craig has proposed that the AIC creates a moment-by-moment representation of "how you feel" — a neural image of the body's state that underpins subjective awareness itself. In Craig's model, interoception isn't just one sense among many. It is the physiological foundation of conscious experience.

"The anterior insular cortex provides a neural basis for the subjective image of the material self as a feeling entity — the 'material me.' It represents the primary neural substrate for awareness." — A.D. (Bud) Craig, Barrow Neurological Institute

The Insular Cortex: Where Body Becomes Mind

The insular cortex — a region of the brain folded deep within the lateral sulcus, hidden from view on the brain's surface — is the central hub of interoceptive processing. It's also one of the most connected regions in the entire brain, with projections to the amygdala, prefrontal cortex, anterior cingulate cortex, somatosensory cortex, and limbic system.

The insula operates as a hierarchical processing pipeline:

Key Insight

The insular cortex processes body sensations into conscious feelings through a posterior-to-anterior pipeline. The anterior insula — where body state meets emotion and context — may be the neural basis of subjective awareness itself.

The Somatic Marker Hypothesis Revisited

Antonio Damasio's somatic marker hypothesis, first proposed in the 1990s, argued that body signals are essential for decision-making. But the mechanism he described is fundamentally interoceptive: the brain uses the body's internal state as a source of information about the value of different choices.

When you're faced with a decision, your brain doesn't just run logical calculations. It simulates the potential outcomes of each option and monitors the body for its response. Option A produces a subtle tightness in the chest. Option B generates a feeling of expansion and ease. These somatic markers — perceived through interoception — tag decision options with emotional valence, guiding choice in ways that pure logic cannot.

Damasio's patients with vmPFC damage couldn't use somatic markers because the brain region that processes interoceptive data in the context of decision-making was destroyed. They could reason but couldn't feel their way to good decisions. The result was rational analysis without wisdom — and consistently catastrophic choices.

Research has since confirmed that interoceptive accuracy — how well you can perceive your own body signals — directly predicts decision-making quality. A 2010 study by Barnaby Dunn and colleagues found that traders with higher interoceptive accuracy (measured by heartbeat detection tasks) made more profitable decisions and survived longer in the markets. Their gut feelings were literally making them better at their jobs.

Interoceptive Accuracy and Emotional Intelligence

Here's a finding that has profound implications: people who are better at perceiving their own body signals are better at understanding and regulating their emotions.

Research by Sarah Garfinkel at the University of Sussex has shown that interoceptive accuracy — typically measured by asking participants to count their heartbeats without touching their pulse — correlates with:

The relationship between interoception and emotion is not just correlational — it may be constitutive. The constructionist theory of emotion, developed by Lisa Feldman Barrett, proposes that emotions are not triggered but constructed by the brain from three ingredients: interoceptive data (what the body is doing), contextual information (what's happening in the environment), and prior experience (what has happened in similar situations before). In this model, interoception isn't a component of emotion — it's the raw material from which emotion is built.

"An emotion is your brain's creation of what your body sensations mean, in relation to what is going on around you in the world." — Lisa Feldman Barrett, PhD, Northeastern University

Gut Feelings as Neural Signals

The phrase "gut feeling" turns out to be neurologically precise. The enteric nervous system in the gut sends a continuous stream of afferent signals through the vagus nerve to the brain. These signals — about gut motility, microbiome metabolite levels, inflammatory markers, and mechanical distension — are processed interoceptively and contribute to the feeling of "rightness" or "wrongness" about a situation.

Research by Emeran Mayer at UCLA has shown that gut-to-brain signals influence mood, anxiety, and cognitive processing through interoceptive pathways. When participants in his studies experienced gut inflammation, they reported increased anxiety and negative emotional bias — not because they were conscious of their gut state, but because their interoceptive system was processing the gut's distress signals and coloring their emotional experience.

This means that a gut feeling isn't mystical intuition — it's your enteric nervous system providing data that your brain processes below conscious awareness. The quality of your gut feelings depends on the health of your gut (which determines the clarity of its signals) and your interoceptive accuracy (which determines how well your brain reads those signals).

When Interoception Goes Wrong

Disrupted interoception is now recognized as a feature of numerous mental health conditions:

Key Insight

Disrupted interoception is now linked to anxiety, depression, eating disorders, PTSD, and autism. Interventions that improve interoceptive accuracy — mindfulness, breathwork, somatic movement — may address these conditions at a foundational level.

Training Interoception

Unlike the traditional five senses, interoception can be systematically trained. Research has identified several practices that improve interoceptive accuracy:

Why This Matters

Interoception is not an esoteric concept. It is the mechanism through which the body informs the mind. Every emotion you feel is built from interoceptive data. Every gut feeling you follow is a processed interoceptive signal. Every decision you make is tagged by somatic markers that arise from interoceptive processing.

When interoception is accurate, you experience clear emotions, reliable intuition, and sound body-informed judgment. When it's disrupted — through chronic stress, trauma, sedentary behavior, or simple lack of attention — you lose contact with the body's intelligence, becoming disconnected from the very signals that make good decisions possible.

The science of interoception is the science of what happens when you learn to listen to your body — and what happens when you don't.

Key Takeaway

Interoception — the perception of internal body states — is the foundation of emotional experience, decision-making, and self-awareness. It can be trained through body scan meditation, breath awareness, somatic movement, and attention to internal sensation. Improving interoception improves everything downstream: emotion, intuition, and judgment.