Food Consciousness Intervention Improves Interoceptive Sensitivity and Expression of Exteroception in Women.
Carina Carlucci PalazzoBarbara Esteves LeghiRosa Wanda Diez-GarciaPublished in: Nutrients (2022)
The perception of the body's internal state (interoception) and the perception and processing of environmental sensory stimuli (exteroception) act together to modulate adaptive behaviour, including eating behaviour, and are related to bodyweight control. This study evaluated the impact of the Food and Nutrition Education Program with Sensory and Cognitive Exercises on interoceptive sensitivity and on the expression of exteroceptive perception in women who experienced difficulty in controlling their body weight. Thirty-seven women were randomized into two groups and evaluated at two moments: before and after the intervention or before and after a 3- to 4-week waiting period. A heartbeat tracking task was used for interoception evaluation. Participants were asked to write a text describing three foods after tasting them for exteroception evaluation. After the intervention, the participants showed an increase in interoceptive sensitivity, and an increase in the expression of exteroceptive stimuli perception through a semantic assessment of their writing related to the tasting experience. In addition, the results point to a possible connection between the mechanisms governing interoception and exteroception. This work brings important contributions to the search for strategies capable of promoting the perception and integration of physiological and environmental stimuli in food consumption.
Keyphrases
- poor prognosis
- randomized controlled trial
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- body weight
- human health
- pregnancy outcomes
- healthcare
- quality improvement
- binding protein
- cervical cancer screening
- placebo controlled
- double blind
- type diabetes
- weight loss
- clinical trial
- metabolic syndrome
- pregnant women
- body composition
- adipose tissue
- life cycle