Significance of the insula for the evolution of human awareness of feelings from the body
Atkins (United States) · Barrow Neurological Institute
Abstract
An ascending sensory pathway that underlies feelings from the body, such as cooling or toothache, terminates in the posterior insula. Considerable evidence suggests that this activity is rerepresented and integrated first in the mid-insula and then in the anterior insula. Activation in the anterior insula correlates directly with subjective feelings from the body and, strikingly, with all emotional feelings. These findings appear to signify a posterior-to-anterior sequence of increasingly homeostatically efficient representations that integrate all salient neural activity, culminating in network nodes in the right and left anterior insulae that may be organized asymmetrically in an opponent fashion. The…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 42.24
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 89
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Insula
- Feeling
- Psychology
- Neuroscience
- Cognitive psychology
- Social psychology