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August/September 2007

August/September 2007
Scientific American Mind

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Where Mind and Body Meet; August/September 2007; Scientific American Mind; by Sandra Blakeslee and Matthew Blakeslee; 8 Page(s)

Do you consider yourself to be emotionally intelligent? Are you empathic, able to read other people's feelings even when they try to hide or swallow them? Or do friends rib you about your social cluelessness? Do people see you as spiritually grounded, emotionally balanced, a rock? Or do they say you're repressed, tactless, juvenile? If you weren't in good touch with your own emotional inner world, how would you ever know?

Several years ago nine women and eight men came to Hugo Critchley's laboratory at the Institute for Cognitive Neuroscience at University College London to explore their level of emotional sensitivity. Critchley, an expert on brain mapping who is now at the University of Sussex in England, was interested in the relation between emotional intelligence and a brain function called interoception--your ability to read and interpret sensations arising from within your own body.



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