BackgroundBody image disturbance (BID) is a core symptom of anorexia nervosa (AN), but as yet
distinctive features of BID are unknown. The present study aimed at disentangling
perceptual and attitudinal components of BID in AN.MethodsWe investigated n = 24 women with AN and n = 24
controls. Based on a three-dimensional (3D) body scan, we created realistic virtual 3D
bodies (avatars) for each participant that were varied through a range of ±20% of the
participants’ weights. Avatars were presented in a virtual reality mirror scenario.
Using different psychophysical tasks, participants identified and adjusted their actual
and their desired body weight. To test for general perceptual biases in estimating body
weight, a second experiment investigated perception of weight and shape matched avatars
with another identity.ResultsWomen with AN and controls underestimated their weight, with a trend that women with AN
underestimated more. The average desired body of controls had normal weight while the
average desired weight of women with AN corresponded to extreme AN (DSM-5). Correlation
analyses revealed that desired body weight, but not accuracy of weight estimation, was
associated with eating disorder symptoms. In the second experiment, both groups
estimated accurately while the most attractive body was similar to Experiment 1.ConclusionsOur results contradict the widespread assumption that patients with AN overestimate
their body weight due to visual distortions. Rather, they illustrate that BID might be
driven by distorted attitudes with regard to the desired body. Clinical interventions
should aim at helping patients with AN to change their desired weight.
Previous literature suggests that a disturbed ability to accurately identify own body size may contribute to overweight. Here, we investigated the influence of personal body size, indexed by body mass index (BMI), on body size estimation in a non-clinical population of females varying in BMI. We attempted to disentangle general biases in body size estimates and attitudinal influences by manipulating whether participants believed the body stimuli (personalized avatars with realistic weight variations) represented their own body or that of another person. Our results show that the accuracy of own body size estimation is predicted by personal BMI, such that participants with lower BMI underestimated their body size and participants with higher BMI overestimated their body size. Further, participants with higher BMI were less likely to notice the same percentage of weight gain than participants with lower BMI. Importantly, these results were only apparent when participants were judging a virtual body that was their own identity (Experiment 1), but not when they estimated the size of a body with another identity and the same underlying body shape (Experiment 2a). The different influences of BMI on accuracy of body size estimation and sensitivity to weight change for self and other identity suggests that effects of BMI on visual body size estimation are self-specific and not generalizable to other bodies.
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