Suicide and Mental Health Research Group, University of Otago, Wellington, PO Box 7343, Wellington, Newtown, 6242, New Zealand.
Department of Psychological Medicine, University of Otago, Wellington, New Zealand.
Trials. 2020 Jul 14;21(1):642. doi: 10.1186/s13063-020-04479-9.
William James' 1884 paper "What is an emotion?" has generated much recent interest in affective science regarding somatic contributions to emotion. Studies of interoception ("sensing the physiological condition of the body") suggest that sensing specific parts of the body contributes to the production of emotion, namely when sensing the viscera (i.e. "visceroception" of the heart, gut or lungs). Improved visceroception has, for instance, been linked to increased emotional intensity, suggesting a role for interoception in emotion regulation that may pertain specifically to visceral bodily locations. Thus, in addition to asking James' question, "What is an emotion?", we ask, "Where is an emotion?". Further, there is an evidence base pointing to the connections between emotion regulation and suicide, and between interoception and suicide. This is a preliminary trial investigating whether targeted interoception/visceroception improves emotion regulation. Ultimately, the overall project aims to inform suicide prevention efforts.
The trial utilises a pre-test/post-test control group design, with two experimental groups undergoing visceroceptive interventions (focussing on areas pertaining to the gut or heart) and a control group. The interventions will run for 8 weeks. A spatial cueing task will measure reaction times to bodily changes relating to lower abdomen or chest focus. A stop/signal task will measure emotional inhibition, which is hypothesised to obscure awareness of active bodily locations. Visceroceptive ability will be tracked using a heartbeat estimation task, a water load test, and by self-report questionnaire. The sample will consist of healthcare professionals and healthcare students. Despite these being groups that represent a relatively high suicide risk among professional and student groups, all participants will be healthy, given the preliminary nature of this trial.
To our knowledge, this will be the first project to address whether emotional feeling presents as a localised bodily phenomenon and whether trained awareness of emotional localisation can improve emotion regulation. It will also be the first to investigate relationships between interoception and emotional inhibition (i.e. whether a sustained interoceptive practice leads to the disinhibition of bodily emotional sensations, which can positively contribute to emotion regulation). These empirical findings on emotion regulation from a healthy sample will be used to inform a desk-based enquiry into the role of embodied emotion in suicide prevention, which may make a significant contribution to a growing evidence base on interoception and suicide.
ACTR N12619000324112 . Registered on 4 March 2019. Universal Trial Number (UTN): U1111-1221-0201.
威廉·詹姆斯(William James)在 1884 年发表的论文《什么是情感?》(“What is an emotion?”)引发了人们对情感科学中躯体贡献的浓厚兴趣。对“内感受”(“感知身体的生理状况”)的研究表明,感知身体的特定部位有助于产生情感,即当感知内脏(即心脏、肠道或肺部的“内脏感受”)时。例如,提高内脏感受与情绪强度的增加有关,这表明内感受在情绪调节中可能具有特定的内脏身体位置的作用。因此,除了提出詹姆斯的问题“什么是情感?”之外,我们还会问,“情感在哪里?”。此外,有证据表明情绪调节与自杀之间存在联系,内感受与自杀之间也存在联系。这是一项初步试验,旨在研究有针对性的内脏感受/内脏感受是否可以改善情绪调节。最终,整个项目旨在为预防自杀工作提供信息。
该试验采用了预测试/后测试对照组设计,两个实验组进行内脏感受干预(专注于与肠道或心脏相关的区域),对照组进行干预。干预将持续 8 周。空间提示任务将测量对下腹部或胸部焦点相关身体变化的反应时间。停止/信号任务将测量情绪抑制,这被假设为掩盖对活跃身体部位的意识。内脏感受能力将通过心跳估计任务、水负荷测试和自我报告问卷进行跟踪。样本将由医护人员和医学生组成。尽管这些群体是专业和学生群体中自杀风险相对较高的群体,但鉴于该试验的初步性质,所有参与者都将身体健康。
据我们所知,这将是第一个解决情感是否表现为局部身体现象的项目,以及是否可以通过训练来提高对情感定位的认识来改善情绪调节。它还将首次研究内感受与情绪抑制之间的关系(即,持续的内感受练习是否会导致身体情绪感觉的去抑制,从而对情绪调节产生积极贡献)。这些来自健康样本的关于情绪调节的经验发现将被用于指导对预防自杀中身体情感作用的基于桌面的探究,这可能对日益增长的内感受和自杀证据基础做出重大贡献。
ACTR N12619000324112。注册于 2019 年 3 月 4 日。通用试验编号(UTN):U1111-1221-0201。