Abstract

BackgroundBody representation disturbances in body schema (i.e. unconscious sensorimotor body representations for action) have been frequently reported in eating disorders. Recently, it has been proposed that body schema relies on adequate functioning of the motor system, which is strongly implicated in discriminating between one’s own and someone else’s body. The present study aimed to investigate the motor-based bodily self in eating disorders and controls, in order to examine the role of the motor system in body representation disturbances at the body schema level.MethodFemale outpatients diagnosed with eating disorders (N = 15), and healthy controls (N = 18) underwent a hand laterality task, in which their own (self-stimuli) and someone else’s hands (other-stimuli) were displayed at different orientations. Participants had to mentally rotate their own hand in order to provide a laterality judgement. Group differences in motor-based bodily self-recognition—i.e. whether a general advantage occurred when implicitly processing self- vs. other-stimuli − were evaluated, by analyzing response times and accuracy by means of mixed ANOVAs.ResultsPatients with eating disorders did not show a temporal advantage when mentally rotating self-stimuli compared to other-stimuli, as opposed to controls (F(1, 31) = 5.6, p = 0.02; eating disorders-other = 1092 ±256 msec, eating disorders-self = 1097±254 msec; healthy controls-other = 1239±233 msec, healthy controls -self = 1192±232 msec).ConclusionThis study provides initial indication that high-level motor functions might be compromised as part of body schema disturbances in eating disorders. Further larger investigations are required to test motor system abnormalities in the context of body schema disturbance in eating disorders.

Highlights

  • Body representation disturbances are one of the central core symptoms of Eating Disorders (EDs) and may involve atypical processes at level of both the conscious perceptual, semantic— affective representations of the body and the functional, sensorimotor representations of body and space for action

  • This study provides initial indication that high-level motor functions might be compromised as part of body schema disturbances in eating disorders

  • According to the view that body schema is a dynamic representation interacting with the motor system for the control of action [15,16,17,18,19] − and underlies motor simulation as well [20,21,22,23,24,25] − Guardia and colleagues [26, 27] evaluated it in Anorexia Nervosa (AN) using a body-scale-action task, where participants were requested to image whether or not an aperture was wide enough for them to pass through

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Summary

Background

Body representation disturbances in body schema (i.e. unconscious sensorimotor body representations for action) have been frequently reported in eating disorders. It has been proposed that body schema relies on adequate functioning of the motor system, which is strongly implicated in discriminating between one’s own and someone else’s body. The present study aimed to investigate the motor-based bodily self in eating disorders and controls, in order to examine the role of the motor system in body representation disturbances at the body schema level

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