Abstract

We investigated the effects of non-informative vision of the body on exteroceptive multisensory integration and touch perception in participants presenting with different levels of eating disorder (ED) symptoms. The study employed a sample of women reporting low (low ED; n = 31) vs high (high ED; n = 34) levels of subclinical ED symptoms who undertook the Somatic Signal Detection task (SSDT). During the SSDT, participants are required to detect near-threshold tactile stimulation at their fingertip with and without a simultaneous light flash next to the stimulated fingertip. Previous research has found that participants have a tendency to erroneously report touch sensations in the absence of the stimulation, and especially when the light flash is presented. In this study, participants completed the SSDT under two conditions: while their hand was visible (non-informative vision), and while their hand was hidden from sight (no vision). Non-informative vision of the hand was found to have a different effect on SSDT performances according to participants’ levels of ED symptoms. High ED participants were better able to correctly detect the touch during the SSDT when their hand was visible. Conversely, for low ED participants, vision of the body was linked to a greater effect of the light in inducing false reports of touch. We suggest that in those with high ED symptoms, vision of the body may exacerbate a predisposition to focusing on external rather than internal bodily information.

Highlights

  • The way we perceive bodily sensations depends on a number of environmental and contextual variables that can enhance or reduce perceptive acuity and alter somatosensation (Longo & Sadibolova, 2013)

  • Of relevance here is a previous study from our research group where we found that vision of one’s own face increased sensitivity to touch during the Somatic Signal Detection task (SSDT) only in participants presenting with high eating disorder (ED) but not low ED symptoms (Sacchetti, Mirams, McGlone & Cazzato, 2020)

  • The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of noninformative vision of the body on exteroceptive multisensory integration and touch perception in participants presenting with different levels of ED symptoms

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Summary

Introduction

The way we perceive bodily sensations depends on a number of environmental and contextual variables that can enhance or reduce perceptive acuity and alter somatosensation (Longo & Sadibolova, 2013). Noninformative vision of the body was found to enhance tactile spatial acuity in terms of reduced two-point discrimination, enhanced amplitude discrimination of above-threshold stimuli and reduced tactile detection thresholds (Tipper et al, 1998, 2001; Kennett, Taylor-Clarke & Haggard, 2001; Serino, Padiglioni, Haggard & Làdavas, 2009; Keizer, Smeets, Dijkerman, van Elburg & Postma, 2012; Harris, Arabzadeh, Moore & Clifford, 2007) In these cases, vision of the body has been thought to improve tactile perception by sharpening tactile receptive fields in the primary cortical somatosensory map (Haggard, Christakou, & Serino, 2007)

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