Development of interoception: the critical role of maternal affective touch in early attachment
Paola Solano Durán, Valeria Isaac

TL;DR
The paper explores how maternal affective touch in early life helps develop interoception, which is important for bodily awareness and emotional regulation.
Contribution
It introduces the novel idea that early attachment relationships, especially through maternal touch, shape interoceptive development.
Findings
Maternal affective touch integrates interoceptive signals in the central nervous system during infancy.
Early relational and embodied experiences lay the foundation for lifelong interoceptive awareness and emotional regulation.
This perspective offers new implications for understanding and treating psychopathologies linked to interoceptive and autonomic dysregulation.
Abstract
Despite growing interest in interoceptive functioning, primarily due to its pivotal role in physical and mental health, little is known about its developmental origins and the factors that influence it. Interoception—the perception of one’s internal bodily state—in which bottom-up sensory signals from receptors located in the body are integrated with top-down cognitive interpretations, is crucial for homeostatic and emotional regulation and overall wellbeing. Specific questions remain on how and when this function typically develops. Here, we propose that early attachment relationships, facilitated by maternal affective touch (MAT), provide a critical context in which interoceptive signals are integrated within central nervous system structures and learned to be accurately sensed, perceived, and interpreted later in life. We examine neurobiological mechanisms linking MAT to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPsychosomatic Disorders and Their Treatments · Neuroendocrine regulation and behavior · Pediatric Pain Management Techniques
