Abstract

We examined whether alterations in body perception in EDs extend to the integration of exteroceptive visual and tactile information. Moreover, we investigated the effect of self-focused attention on the ability to correctly detect tactile stimuli. Twenty-seven women reporting low ED symptoms, versus 26 women reporting high ED symptoms, undertook a modified version of the Somatic Signal Detection Task (SSDT), which involved detecting tactile stimuli on the cheek in the presence or absence of a concomitant light. The SSDT was completed while looking at a photograph of one’s own face, another female face, and a scrambled face. Heart rate and skin conductance were recorded continuously during the SSDT. Although ED symptoms were not associated with an overall increased tendency to misperceive touch in the presence of a light, High ED participants were differentially affected by self-focused attention. For the High ED group, physiological arousal, and tactile sensitivity (d′) were increased when self-focused attention was augmented. For the Low ED group, sensitivity (d′) and physiological arousal were higher in the control conditions. We suggest that in those with High ED symptoms, attention to the bodily self may exacerbate a predisposition to focusing on external rather than internal bodily information.

Highlights

  • We examined whether alterations in body perception in Eating disorders (EDs) extend to the integration of exteroceptive visual and tactile information

  • Responses on the Somatic Signal Detection Task (SSDT) were classified as hits, misses, false alarms or correct rejections

  • The Low ED group showed significantly higher SCLs in the Scrambled (M = 1.19, Standard Deviation (SD) = 3.12) compared to the self-focused attention (Self) (M = − .38, SD = 2, p = .30, d = .44) condition, while the High ED group exhibited an opposite trend with higher SCLs in the Self (M = 1.70, SD = 3.36) compared to the Scrambled (M = .04, SD = 1.72, p = .058, d = .39) condition

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Summary

Introduction

We examined whether alterations in body perception in EDs extend to the integration of exteroceptive visual and tactile information. Interoception can be defined as the sense of the physiological condition of the body, and includes the perception of internal organ functions, muscular and visceral stimuli, hunger, thirst, pain, and p­ leasure[13]. In this regard, different samples of ED patients have been found to have a reduced interoceptive sensibility, that is, a lower self-reported propensity to focus on internal bodily ­sensations[14,15,16]. While findings on reduced interoceptive sensibility are consistent across studies, some studies failed to find a difference in interoceptive

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