Abstract

Most research on people’s representation of space has focused on spatial appraisal and navigation. But there is more to space besides navigation and assessment: people have different emotional experiences at different places, which create emotionally tinged representations of space. Little is known about the emotional representation of space and the factors that shape it. The purpose of this study was to develop a graphic methodology to study the emotional representation of space and some of the environmental features (non-natural vs. natural) and personal features (affective state and interoceptive sensibility) that modulate it. We gave participants blank maps of the region where they lived and asked them to apply shade where they had happy/sad memories, and where they wanted to go after Covid-19 lockdown. Participants also completed self-reports on affective state and interoceptive sensibility. By adapting methods for analyzing neuroimaging data, we examined shaded pixels to quantify where and how strong emotions are represented in space. The results revealed that happy memories were consistently associated with similar spatial locations. Yet, this mapping response varied as a function of participants’ affective state and interoceptive sensibility. Certain regions were associated with happier memories in participants whose affective state was more positive and interoceptive sensibility was higher. The maps of happy memories, desired locations to visit after lockdown, and regions where participants recalled happier memories as a function of positive affect and interoceptive sensibility overlayed significantly with natural environments. These results suggest that people’s emotional representations of their environment are shaped by the naturalness of places, and by their affective state and interoceptive sensibility.

Highlights

  • Most research on people’s representation of space has focused on spatial appraisal and navigation

  • The main purpose of this study was to examine people’s emotional representation of space and how it is shaped by certain environmental features, such as whether a place is natural or non-natural, and certain personal features, such as affective state and interoceptive sensibility (Fig. 1)

  • We examined the relationship between participants’ interoceptive sensibility and their emotional representation of space by correlating their scores in the Multidimensional Assessment of Interoceptive Awareness (MAIA) questionnaire (Spanish validated ­version46) and their spatial maps of emotional memories

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Summary

Introduction

Most research on people’s representation of space has focused on spatial appraisal and navigation. The maps of happy memories, desired locations to visit after lockdown, and regions where participants recalled happier memories as a function of positive affect and interoceptive sensibility overlayed significantly with natural environments. These results suggest that people’s emotional representations of their environment are shaped by the naturalness of places, and by their affective state and interoceptive sensibility. Recent evidence shows that people’s assessment of their environment involves running an internal model of their body in the w­ orld[12,13] Such a model reflects information about their affective state, physiological state, and desired future s­ tates[12,13,14,15]. This balance is achieved through the constant regulation and anticipation of future needs and challenges in the environment (i.e., allostasis)[25,26]

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