Abstract
Respiratory rhythms sustain biological life, governing the homeostatic exchange of oxygen and carbon
dioxide. Until recently, however, the influence of breathing on the brain has largely been overlooked. Yet
new evidence demonstrates that the act of breathing exerts a substantive, rhythmic influence on perception,
emotion, and cognition, largely through the direct modulation of neural oscillations. Here, we synthesize
these findings to motivate a new predictive coding model of respiratory brain coupling, in which breathing
rhythmically modulates both local and global neural gain, to optimize cognitive and affective processing.
Our model further explains how respiratory rhythms interact with the topology of the functional
connectome, and we highlight key implications for the computational psychiatry of disordered respiratory
and interoceptive inference.