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Sarah N. Garfinkel

Researcher at Brighton and Sussex Medical School

Publications -  106
Citations -  6319

Sarah N. Garfinkel is an academic researcher from Brighton and Sussex Medical School. The author has contributed to research in topics: Interoception & Cognition. The author has an hindex of 33, co-authored 91 publications receiving 4692 citations. Previous affiliations of Sarah N. Garfinkel include University of Sussex & University of Michigan.

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Knowing your own heart: distinguishing interoceptive accuracy from interoceptive awareness.

TL;DR: Empirical support for dissociation between dimensions of interoceptive accuracy, sensibility and awareness is provided and set the context for defining how the relative balance of accuracy, Sensibility and Awareness dimensions explain cognitive, emotional and clinical associations of interOceptive ability.
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Interoception and emotion.

TL;DR: This work describes the afferent signalling, central processing, and neural and mental representation of internal bodily signals in interoception, and describes the recognition of dissociable psychological dimensions of interoceptions.
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Neural dysregulation in posttraumatic stress disorder: evidence for disrupted equilibrium between salience and default mode brain networks.

TL;DR: A relative dominance of threat-sensitive circuitry in PTSD is suggested, even in task-free conditions, and Disequilibrium between large-scale networks subserving salience detection versus internally focused thought may be associated with PTSD pathophysiology.
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Multisensory integration across exteroceptive and interoceptive domains modulates self-experience in the rubber-hand illusion

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that both subjective and objective measures of virtual-hand ownership are enhanced by cardio-visual feedback in-time with the actual heartbeat, as compared to asynchronous feedback.
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Altered resting-state amygdala functional connectivity in men with posttraumatic stress disorder

TL;DR: Results demonstrate that studies of functional connectivity during resting state can discern aberrant patterns of coupling within emotion circuits and suggest a possible brain basis for emotion-processing and emotion-regulation deficits in individuals with PTSD.