“…Genderrelated differences in symptom appraisal, socialization processes and gender roles, as well as gender biases in research and clinical practices, may also account for some of the effect . However, two additional observations are important in this respect: First, in laboratory environments, women are consistently found to be less accurate than men at detecting physiological changes in, for example, heart rate, blood glucose, blood pressure, respiration, and gastrointestinal sensations (Pennebaker and Roberts, 1992;Roberts and Pennebaker, 1994), which may be due to gender-related structural and functional differences in the interoceptive network in the brain (Naliboff et al, 2003;Fairclough and Goodwin, 2007;Harshaw, 2015). Second, this laboratory difference in interoceptive accuracy disappears in natural environments, which may be related to women being more sensitive to contextual cues when determining their internal state (see Pennebaker and Roberts, 1992;Roberts and Pennebaker, 1994;Pennebaker, 1995).…”