Abstract

Background: Body dysmorphic disorder (BDD) is a psychiatric disorder characterized by excessive preoccupation with imagined defects in appearance. Optical illusions induce illusory effects that distort the presented stimulus, thus leading to ambiguous percepts. Using electroencephalography (EEG), we investigated whether BDD is related to differentiated perception during illusory percepts. Methods: A total of 18 BDD patients and 18 controls were presented with 39 optical illusions together with a statement testing whether or not they perceived the illusion. After a delay period, they were prompted to answer whether the statement was right/wrong and their degree of confidence in their answer. We investigated differences of BDD patients on task performance and self-reported confidence and analyzed the brain oscillations during decision-making using nonparametric cluster statistics. Results: Behaviorally, the BDD group exhibited reduced confidence when responding incorrectly, potentially attributed to higher levels of doubt. Electrophysiologically, the BDD group showed significantly reduced alpha power at the fronto-central and parietal scalp areas, suggesting impaired allocation of attention. Interestingly, the lower the alpha power of the identified cluster, the higher the BDD severity, as assessed by BDD psychometrics. Conclusions: Results evidenced that alpha power during illusory processing might serve as a quantitative EEG biomarker of BDD, potentially associated with reduced inhibition of task-irrelevant areas.

Highlights

  • Body dysmorphic disorder (BDD) is an often-severe psychiatric disorder, recently classified within the Obsessive-Compulsive and Related Disorders (OCD) [1]

  • Do BDD patients succumb to illusory effects more than healthy people do? Are BDD patients less confident when making judgements on optical illusions? What are the neural correlates of the decision-making process, and, are those related to BDD severity? We investigated these questions by presenting BDD patients and healthy controls with optical illusions and asking them to make subjective judgements, while the electroencephalogram (EEG) was recorded

  • The BDD group exhibited significantly lower Degree of Confidence (DoC) when responding incorrectly compared to when responding correctly (t(17) = 2.727, p = 0.014), whereas the CTL group showed no significant difference in DoC between conditions (p = 0.910)

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Summary

Introduction

Body dysmorphic disorder (BDD) is an often-severe psychiatric disorder, recently classified within the Obsessive-Compulsive and Related Disorders (OCD) [1]. BDD is characterized by excessive preoccupation with imagined defects in appearance that are not at all or slightly observable to others (DSM-5) [2]. It is widely suggested that optical illusions induce illusory effects that distort the presented stimulus leading to ambiguous percepts [5,6]. Body dysmorphic disorder (BDD) is a psychiatric disorder characterized by excessive preoccupation with imagined defects in appearance. Optical illusions induce illusory effects that distort the presented stimulus, leading to ambiguous percepts. Results: Behaviorally, the BDD group exhibited reduced confidence when responding incorrectly, potentially attributed to higher levels of doubt. Conclusions: Results evidenced that alpha power during illusory processing might serve as a quantitative EEG biomarker of BDD, potentially associated with reduced inhibition of task-irrelevant areas

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