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Dive into the research topics where Jennifer Murphy is active.

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Featured researches published by Jennifer Murphy.


Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience | 2017

Interoception and psychopathology: A developmental neuroscience perspective

Jennifer Murphy; Rebecca Brewer; Caroline Catmur; Geoffrey Bird

Highlights • Reviews literature on the development of interoception.• Atypical interoception may cause onset of psychopathology in adolescence.• Atypical interoception may also cause risky behaviour in adolescence.• Interoceptive changes may underlie socio-emotional changes in late adulthood.


Journal of Experimental Psychology: General | 2017

Alexithymia is associated with a multidomain, multidimensional failure of interoception: Evidence from novel tests.

Jennifer Murphy; Caroline Catmur; Geoffrey Bird

Interoception, the perception of the body’s internal state, contributes to numerous aspects of higher-order cognition. Several theories suggest a causal role for atypical interoception in specific psychiatric disorders, including a recent claim that atypical interoception represents a transdiagnostic impairment across disorders characterized by reduced perception of one’s own emotion (alexithymia). Such theories are supported predominantly by evidence from only one interoceptive domain (cardiac); however, evidence of domain-specific interoceptive ability highlights the need to assess interoception in noncardiac domains. Using novel interoceptive tasks, we demonstrate that individuals high in alexithymic traits show a reduced propensity to utilize interoceptive cues to gauge respiratory output (Experiment 1), reduced accuracy on tasks of muscular effort (Experiment 2), and taste sensitivity (Experiment 3), unrelated to any co-occurring autism, depression, or anxiety. Results suggest that alexithymia reflects a multidomain, multidimensional failure of interoception, which is consistent with theories suggesting that atypical interoception may underpin both symptom commonalities between psychiatric disorders and heterogeneity within disorders.


Psychonomic Bulletin & Review | 2017

The composite face illusion

Jennifer Murphy; Katie Gray; Richard J. Cook

Few findings in cognitive science have proved as influential as the composite face effect. When the top half of one face is aligned with the bottom half of another, and presented upright, the resulting composite arrangement induces a compelling percept of a novel facial configuration. Findings obtained using composite face procedures have contributed significantly to our understanding of holistic face processing, the detrimental effects of face inversion, the development of face perception, and aberrant face perception in clinical populations. Composite paradigms continue to advance our knowledge of face perception, as exemplified by their recent use for investigating the perceptual mechanisms underlying dynamic face processing. However, the paradigm has been the subject of intense scrutiny, particularly over the last decade, and there is a growing sense that the composite face illusion, whilst easy to illustrate, is deceptively difficult to measure and interpret. In this review, we provide a focussed overview of the existing composite face literature, and identify six priorities for future research. Addressing these gaps in our knowledge will aid the evaluation and refinement of theoretical accounts of the illusion.


Biological Psychology | 2018

Is alexithymia characterised by impaired interoception? Further evidence, the importance of control variables, and the problems with the Heartbeat Counting Task.

Jennifer Murphy; Rebecca Brewer; Hannah Hobson; Caroline Catmur; Geoffrey Bird

Interoception, the perception of ones internal state, is commonly quantified using the heartbeat counting task (HCT) - which is thought to be a measure of cardiac interoceptive sensitivity (accuracy). Interoceptive sensitivity has been associated with a number of clinical traits and aspects of higher order cognition, including emotion processing and decision-making. It has been proposed that alexithymia (difficulties identifying and describing ones own emotions) is associated with impaired interoceptive sensitivity, but new research questions this association. Problematically, much evidence attesting to the absence of this association has been conducted using the HCT, a measure affected by various physiological and psychological factors. Here, we present novel data (N = 287) examining the relationship between alexithymia and HCT performance, controlling for a number of potential confounds. Inclusion of these control measures reveals the predicted negative relationship between alexithymia and HCT performance. Results are discussed with regard to difficulties quantifying interoceptive sensitivity using the HCT.


Biological Psychology | 2018

Knowledge of resting heart rate mediates the relationship between intelligence and the heartbeat counting task

Jennifer Murphy; Edward Millgate; Hayley Geary; Eri Ichijo; Michel-Pierre Coll; Rebecca Brewer; Caroline Catmur; Geoffrey Bird

Evidence suggests that intelligence is positively associated with performance on the heartbeat counting task (HCT). The HCT is often employed as measure of interoception - the ability to perceive the internal state of ones body - however its use remains controversial as performance on the HCT is strongly influenced by knowledge of resting heart rate. This raises the possibility that heart rate knowledge may mediate the previously-observed association between intelligence and HCT performance. Study One demonstrates an association between intelligence and HCT performance (N = 94), and Study Two demonstrates that this relationship is mediated by knowledge of the average resting heart rate (N = 134). These data underscore the need to account for the influence of prior knowledge and beliefs when examining individual differences in cardiac interoceptive accuracy using the HCT.


Emotion | 2017

Social interaction contexts bias the perceived expressions of interactants

Katie Gray; Lee Barber; Jennifer Murphy; Richard J. Cook

The present study sought to determine whether contextual information available when viewing social interactions from third-person perspectives may influence observers’ perception of the interactants’ facial emotion. Observers judged whether the expression of a target face was happy or fearful, in the presence of a happy, aggressive, or neutral interactant. In 2 experiments, the same target expressions were judged to be happier when presented in the context of a happy interactant than when interacting with a neutral or aggressive partner. We failed to show that the target expression was judged as more fearful when interacting with an aggressive partner. Importantly, observers’ perception of the target expression was not modulated by the emotion of the context interactant when the interactants were presented back-to-back, suggesting that the bias depends on the presence of an intact interaction arrangement. These results provide valuable insight into how social contextual effects shape our perception of facial emotion.


Trends in Cognitive Sciences | 2016

Judging the Ability of Friends and Foes

Jennifer Cook; Jennifer Murphy; Geoffrey Bird

Collaboration leads us to judge our own ability to be more similar to our collaborators and their ability to be more similar to our own, while competition leads us to exaggerate the gap between our abilities. How does this happen and what does it mean?


Psychonomic Bulletin & Review | 2018

Direct and indirect effects of age on interoceptive accuracy and awareness across the adult lifespan.

Jennifer Murphy; Hayley Geary; Edward Millgate; Caroline Catmur; Geoffrey Bird


Cognition | 2017

Revealing the mechanisms of human face perception using dynamic apertures

Jennifer Murphy; Richard J. Cook


Personality and Individual Differences | 2018

Alexithymic traits, independent of depression and anxiety, are associated with reduced sleep quality

Jennifer Murphy; Katharina Wulff; Caroline Catmur; Geoffrey Bird

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Geoff Bird

University of Cambridge

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