Abstract
A fundamental ability for us is to identify and distinguish with others, known as the self, whose neural substrate is hard to identify by external self-related stimuli because of possible interference from internal self-related states of both body and brain. Using the same stimuli, we ruled out this dilemma by manipulating human subjects performing own- and celebrity-face discrimination tasks to induce self-related and non-self-related states, respectively. Results showed that stimulus-driven sensory sensory differences among own-, celebrity-, and stranger-faces were independent of task-induced internal states, whereas their perceptual differences were strongly modulated by these states. Intriguingly, we further found that subjects’ bodily (indexed by heartbeat-evoked potentials) rather than brain (indexed by pre-stimulus α-powers) states not only predicated their self-perception but also moderated the relationship between external stimuli and self-perception. Our results reveal for the first time an adaptive self-perception, shaped by not only external stimuli but also internal states, especially the interoception.
Full text
1,220 characters
· extracted from
oa-doi-fallback
· click to expand
Abstract
A fundamental ability for us is to identify and distinguish with others, known as the self, whose neural substrate is hard to identify by external self-related stimuli because of possible interference from internal self-related states of both body and brain. Using the same stimuli, we ruled out this dilemma by manipulating human subjects performing own- and celebrity-face discrimination tasks to induce self-related and non-self-related states, respectively. Results showed that stimulus-driven sensory sensory differences among own-, celebrity-, and stranger-faces were independent of task-induced internal states, whereas their perceptual differences were strongly modulated by these states. Intriguingly, we further found that subjects’ bodily (indexed by heartbeat-evoked potentials) rather than brain (indexed by pre-stimulus α-powers) states not only predicated their self-perception but also moderated the relationship between external stimuli and self-perception. Our results reveal for the first time an adaptive self-perception, shaped by not only external stimuli but also internal states, especially the interoception.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.
Text is read by the "Ask this paper" AI Q&A widget below.
Extraction quality varies by source — PMC NXML preserves structure
cleanly, OA-HTML may include some navigation residue, and OA-PDF can
have broken hyphenation. The publisher copy
(via DOI)
is the canonical version.