“…Parallel to this renewed interest in the relationship between interoception and cognition, individual differences in interoceptive abilities have increasingly been linked to mental health (see Khalsa et al, 2018;Murphy, Brewer, Catmur, & Bird, 2017). Indeed, a body of literature suggests the presence of atypical interoceptive abilities across a number of mental health conditions, including anxiety, depression, obsessive compulsive disorder, anorexia nervosa, schizophrenia, borderline personality disorder and substance use disorders (Ardizzi et al, 2016;Eggart, Lange, Binser, Queri, & Müller-Oerlinghausen, 2019;Löffler, Foell, & Bekrater-Bodmann, 2018;Paulus & Stein, 2010;Schultchen, Zaudig, Krauseneck, Berberich, & Pollatos, 2019;Sönmez, Kahyacı Kılıç, Ateş Çöl, Görgülü, & Köse Çınar, 2017). Despite these considerable efforts to develop our understanding of interoception, and determine its relevance for health and cognition, empirical progress has been impeded by difficulties with the measurement of interoceptive abilities.…”