Abstract

Mounting research evidence suggests that motor resonance (MR, i.e., the mapping of others’ actions onto one’s own motor repertoire) can be influenced by diverse factors related to individual differences. However, no evidence has been reported so far on the effects of physical appearance and negative attitudes toward obesity to the mechanism of MR. Thirty-six participants (18 normal-weight and 18 overweight) performed a weight discrimination task, in which they were observing amateur actors reaching and grasping a light or heavy cube with or without deception (true vs. fake actions). At the end of each video clip, participants were instructed to indicate the correct cube size (light or heavy). Importantly, body similarity between observers and actors was manipulated by presenting videos of normal-weight or overweight actors. Fat phobic attitudes and automatic preference for normal-weight than obese people were also examined. Signal detection analysis (d′) on the acquired accuracy data has shown that both normal- and overweight participants were able to better discriminate truthful actions when performed by the normal-weight as compared to overweight actors. Furthermore, this finding was negatively correlated with increased scores of fat phobic attitudes in both groups. Hence, for the first time, we provide experimental evidence of action simulation being modulated by an implicit visual sensitivity towards slim bodies.

Highlights

  • Motor resonance (MR) refers to the phenomenon in which when one person observes another performing a motor act, this perception automatically activates a similar network of brain regions that would be involved during action execution

  • Grip aperture (GA), wrist angle (WA), and index flexion (IF) kinematics data from both the reaching and lifting phases were entered into separate factorial ANOVAs with actions type (TA, FA), models’ weight, and object weight as between-movies factors

  • Newman–Keuls post-hoc comparison showed that when the heavy cube was lifted by the overweight models, grip aperture (GA) displacement was significantly smaller as compared to when lifted by the normal-weight model

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Summary

Introduction

Motor resonance (MR) refers to the phenomenon in which when one person observes another performing a motor act, this perception automatically activates a similar network of brain regions that would be involved during action execution. Recent studies on pain perception (Avenanti, Sirigu, & Aglioti, 2010; Azevedo, Macaluso, Avenanti, Santangelo, Cazzato, & Aglioti, 2013; Azevedo, Macaluso, Viola, Sani, & Aglioti, 2014) have reported the influence of physical similarity and group membership on the empathic resonant neural responses to others’ pain. It has been shown that the pervasive tendency towards the body thinness ideal documented in Western Societies (Thompson & Stice, 2001) can lead to negative prejudice towards obese individuals (i.e., anti-fat bias), which is reciprocally linked to the empathic abilities to understand their emotions and intentions (Gapinski, Schwartz, & Brownell, 2006). Despite the ‘explicit’ evidence reported by several studies on negative attitudes towards obese, other studies

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