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Self-face viewing attenuates cardiac modulation of corticospinal excitability
Introduction:
While self-referential attention is thought to enhance interoceptive sensitivity, its effect on cardiac modulation of corticospinal excitability remains unexplored. This pilot study investigated how viewing one’s own face (self-face processing) modulates the cardiac-phase coupling of motor output and whether this heart-brain coupling depends on interoceptive accuracy (heartbeat perception).
Methods:
In 15 healthy adults, motor-evoked potentials (MEPs) were elicited via transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) at three fixed time points following the R-peak (0, 250, and 500 m) during presentation of either self-face or other-face pictures. A Modulation Index was derived from log-transformed MEPs to quantify cardiac-phase modulation strength. Interoceptive accuracy was assessed via a heartbeat-counting task.
Results:
Contrary to the hypothesis that self- face viewing would enhance cardiac–motor coupling through inward attentional focus, self-face processing significantly reduced the overall magnitude of cardiac-phase modulation. This attenuation was most pronounced at 0 m and 250 m post-R-peak, corresponding to systolic phase. Across conditions, higher interoceptive accuracy predicted stronger modulation, though this relationship showed a tendency toward attenuation during self-face viewing (interaction p = 0.059).
Discussion:
The results of this pilot TMS study suggest that, in a task requiring explicit evaluation of facial stimuli, self-face viewing acts as a potent exteroceptive stimulus that diverts attention away from interoceptive signals, thereby weakening the cardiac-cycle influence on motor excitability. These findings highlight the context-dependency of self-processing effects and suggest a possible link between HCT-based interoceptive accuracy and heart-brain- body coupling.