Author ORCID Identifier

Tomi-Ann Roberts: 0000-0002-5266-9422

Benita Jackson: 0000-0001-6313-0812

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

4-2026

Publication Title

Brain Science

Abstract

Much of the interoception literature assumes that people can accurately detect their heart rate, stomach contractility, muscle tension, and other biological cues. This is not true. Instead, interoception is an active integrative psychological process where the feeling of one’s internal state emerges from physiological signals, contextual cues, and the social and cultural experiences of living in a body. Thinking of interoception this way shifts the focus from measuring accuracy at detecting biological signaling to studying lived experience. One such experience is the widespread objectification of women’s bodies. Living in a body that is chronically evaluated creates a particular form of self-consciousness. Here, we propose that self-objectification redirects attention toward the body, potentially reshaping both the allocation of attention to internal sensations and their interpretation and thereby offering a theoretical account of paradoxes in the interoception literature, such as women’s lower detection accuracy but higher symptom reporting, and mismatches between subjective and physiological reports of menopausal hot flashes. We consider implications for women’s health, including reproductive health, ACL injury risk, and chronic pain. Our framework suggests that “feeling like a woman” reflects an interoceptive experience shaped significantly by objectification, with important consequences for well-being.

Keywords

interoception; gender; objectification; self-objectification; women’s health

Volume

16

Issue

494

DOI

https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci16050494

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Rights

© 2026 by the authors.

Version

Version of Record

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