What Your Body Tells You Can Protect You From Stress, Study Suggests

Article At A Glance
Interoception allows us to respond to and learn from the myriad signals about our current state that the body sends to the brain. According to a study published in Biological Psychology, those with poor interoceptive awareness may be less able to adapt to stressful situations. Yoga, which emphasizes the integration of mind and body, may help to cultivate greater interoceptive ability and increase stress resilience.
Interoception refers to the capacity to accurately detect and interpret bodily cues. Some of these cues are obvious, such as when you accidentally touch a hot surface. But interoception also involves being aware of the body’s more subtle signals. Research now suggests that the more sensitive you are to those signals, the greater your ability to cope effectively with stress may be.
Interoception allows us to respond to and learn from the myriad signals about our current state that the body sends to the brain. According to a study published in Biological Psychology, those with poor interoceptive awareness may be less able to adapt to stressful situations. Yoga, which emphasizes the integration of mind and body, may help to cultivate greater interoceptive ability and increase stress resilience.
Study Shows Benefits of Interoception
The study examined how participants’ brains responded to stress when exposed to aversive sensations. Forty-six adults were divided into either a high, medium or low resilience group based on self-reports of their ability to cope with stress and adversity. Group participants were matched for age, education, and gender.
People with current drug or alcohol dependence, history of brain injury, current use of psychoactive drugs or substances that affect a hemodynamic response, neurological or severe psychiatric disorders, or other factors preventing them from functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) assessment were excluded from the study.
During a laboratory visit, individuals completed questionnaires regarding their interoceptive awareness and responsiveness to bodily sensations. They were then fitted with a nose clip and asked to breathe into a mouthpiece attached to an apparatus that elicited respiratory stress, or “breathing load.” Participants then performed a simple attention task that required pressing either a left or right arrow button in response to an arrow presented on a screen.
During this task, they were also given cues about when they might anticipate a breathing load to assess their anticipatory reaction to physiological stress. Neural responses were recorded using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI).
Results showed that participants in the low resilience group reported decreased interoceptive awareness compared to those who endorsed medium or high resilience to stress. Brain scans showed that low-resilience individuals also demonstrated greater activation in brain regions, including the insula and thalamus, when anticipating stress compared to highly resilient participants. This suggests that those with poor interoception have difficulty processing stressful information.
The study’s authors suggest that a decreased awareness of bodily signals (interoceptive awareness) may leave individuals with lower levels of resilience and greater susceptibility to stress due to a limited capacity to accurately monitor bodily states or predict future needs. This means that adults with attenuated body awareness may be more likely to interpret life events as stressful and less able to enact effective coping strategies.
This research suggests that the modulation of brain systems that process interoceptive information may be necessary to effectively manage life stress. Additionally, individuals with low interoceptive capacity may benefit from stress-reduction interventions involving yoga or another mindfulness-based movement that emphasizes body awareness.
Can Yoga Help Develop Interoception?
Movement-based mindfulness practices, including yoga, tai chi, and Qi gong, draw attention to the mind-body relationship through the conscious integration of awareness, breath, and movement. These tools may help to strengthen interoceptive capability by cultivating greater sensitivity to the link between bodily sensation and cognitive and affective expression and thus enhance one’s ability to recognize, interpret and effectively respond to stress-related bodily cues.
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Dr. B Grace Bullock is a behavioral health, education, and organizational strategist and policy advisor, psychologist, educator, research scientist, book author and science writer. She serves as the Director of Mental and Behavioral Health for the Oregon Department of Education.
Grace has dedicated her career to health promotion, prevention, intervention, research, and developing policies, programs, and practices that ensure that all children and families have equitable access to culturally responsive mental health services and educational supports. She champions the creation of safe, welcoming, and inclusive school systems, cultures, and climates that honor diversity and intersectionality, fully recognize all ways of being and knowing, and ensure that all belong. This means working in partnership to realize detailed, actionable policies that drive sustainable systems to change.
Dr. Bullock strives to be a trusted partner, bringing the values and principles of mind-body medicine into strategic planning, education, and health policy, and program design, development, training, and the evaluation/research of offerings and policies that promote personal, interpersonal, and systemic well-being, effective and equitable leadership, decision-making and social change.
An educator at heart, she teaches courses and workshops on strengths-based, trauma-informed, equity-centered principles and practices, interpersonal relationships, stress resilience, and clinical practice at colleges, universities, professional schools, school districts, and organizations across the USA and Canada. She has spent more than two decades teaching and studying physiological and psychological interventions to reduce stress and support resilient, healthy relationships and systems, and is the author of the acclaimed book, Mindful Relationships: 7 Skills for Success – Integrating the science of mind, body & brain. Her research has been published in numerous empirical journals and featured in Psychology Today and The Greater Good Science Center, among others. She is the science writer for Mindful Magazine and Mindful.org and former Editor in Chief of the International Journal of Yoga Therapy.
She received a BA Highest Honors in Psychology, Summa Cum Laude from the University of California at Los Angeles, an MS and Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology from the University of Oregon, and completed her clinical residency at the University of Washington School of Medicine.
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