Abstract

Dissatisfaction with one’s body is a widespread issue in modern society and has been linked to vulnerability for developing eating disorders. Recent studies have demonstrated a direct relationship between body perception and body satisfaction by manipulating perceived body size using multisensory body illusions. However, how these body size illusions influence implicit affective experience has not previously been examined. The current experiment used an established full-body ownership illusion paradigm to induce feelings of illusory obesity in male and female participants. The effects of illusory obesity on explicit and implicit body satisfaction were measured in naïve participants across two separate experiments. In terms of explicit measures, owning an obese body decreased body satisfaction, and owning a slimmer body increased body satisfaction in females but not in males. However, implicit feelings regarding the body were only influenced by the synchrony of the touch and not the size of the body in the illusion. These results suggest that implicit and explicit affective experiences of the body may be mediated by different factors. In addition, these findings may have clinical implications because both implicit and explicit changes in affective experience of the body were related to behaviours and thoughts associated with disordered eating in a non-clinical sample.

Highlights

  • In today’s modern society, concerns regarding the body are widespread

  • Our earlier findings measured body satisfaction changes only through explicit reports of current body satisfaction, which are vulnerable to demand characteristics, and we only investigated the effects of illusory obesity during functional magnetic resonance imaging using a single questionnaire item response [45]

  • We examined the relationship between the eating disorder characteristics (EDE-Q) and implicit body satisfaction change (d-score synchronous minus d-score asynchronous) for both males and females independently using bivariate correlations

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Summary

Introduction

In today’s modern society, concerns regarding the body are widespread. Negative feelings regarding the body are thought to be related to the development of eating disorders [1], which may be associated with long-term physical [2] and psychological problems [3], as well as high relapse [4] and mortality [5] rates compared with other psychiatric disorders. There is a strong emphasis on thinness, for women, with the social definition of an ideal body being unattainable for most individuals Deviation from this social ideal may elicit negative feelings regarding the body, as well as dieting, disordered eating and other unhealthy weight control behaviour [11]. Many studies have shown a relationship between body size and body dissatisfaction, for women who seem to have stronger negative responses to equivalent increases in body size (correlational study) [6,16] This association between body size and body satisfaction was present in terms of actual body size and for perceived body size when individuals were asked how big their body feels [17]. Until recently, empirical evidence for a direct link between how we perceive (body size) and how we feel about our body (body satisfaction) has remained elusive

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