I'm not sure that I understand the question but it is my understanding that...
The two concepts are different in that they apply to processing at a different level. Events are employed at a higher level (system/code) than interrupts, which happen at lower level (CPU). So even though the interrupts do happen at the CPU level, nodejs abstracts them (using a separate thread for I/O) that will execute a callback if defined.
What a multi-threaded environment, such as Java, does is suspend and resume threads. This is not the same as the CPU-level Interrupts. Java does let the programmer implement interrupts like this:
for (int i = 0; i < importantInfo.length; i++) {
// Pause for 4 seconds
try {
Thread.sleep(4000);
} catch (InterruptedException e) {
// We've been interrupted: no more messages.
return;
}
// Print a message
System.out.println(importantInfo[i]);
}
but this is not at all like a CPU interrupt or a nodejs Event/Callback.
Even though nodejs is said to be single threaded, it does use multiple threads, however it only uses one main thread that is designed to spend little time on the CPU and pass on other IO or CPU intensive tasks to other tasks, so that is may be ready for handling the next (typically http) request
Some reference links:
http://www3.ntu.edu.sg/home/ehchua/programming/java/J5e_multithreading.html
http://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/essential/concurrency/interrupt.html
Difference between interrupt and event
https://softwareengineering.stackexchange.com/questions/298493/nodejs-like-interrupt-handlers