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Anorexia and the 'Too Fat to Fit Through the Door' Experiment

  

Category:  Health, Science & Technology

Via:  perrie-halpern  •  11 years ago  •  0 comments

Anorexia and the 'Too Fat to Fit Through the Door' Experiment

Anorexia, a form of body dysmorphic disorder, is where people actually process how they look differently in the brain. People who suffer from this disorder actually see themselves differently than what is actually there. It is a u nconscious body image misperception. It usually affects type A personalities, and is exacerbated by stress.

In this very interesting experiment done by Utrecht University in The Netherlands, we can actually see the how this misperception of body size effects something as simple as passing through a doorway. Their disorder truly affects who they are, in their own minds.

In the interest of optimizing treatment for people with anorexia nervosa, Anouk Keizer and a team of psychologists at Utrecht University in The Netherlands are working to understand how patients perceive themselves in relation to the physical world. They describe , for example, that people with anorexia seem to vary from the general population in how they perceive certain sensations of touch on their own skin . But, they say, there's not a lot known about "unconscious, action-related, aspects" of perceived body size.

So, to look at this, they asked 39 people (19 diagnosed with anorexia nervosa and 20 without) to walk around a room that included doorways of various sizes. The participants were distracted, asked to do a memory exercise while walking, not knowing that the actual experiment was to look at how they approached the openings.

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PLOSone

People without anorexia seemed to regularly begin to rotate themselves, to fit through the smaller doorways, when the width got down to just 25 percent wider than their shoulders. Meanwhile the people with anorexia started rotating when the openings were 40 percent wider than their shoulders.

Keizer and company conclude from observing these approaches that people with anorexia use their perceptions of themselves in reconciling relationships to physical spaces not just consciously, but unconsciously. As they put it, "The disturbed experience of body size in anorexia nervosa is more pervasive than previously assumed."

Of course that depends on what you assumed.

http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2013/06/anorexia-and-the-too-fat-to-fit-through-the-door-experiment/276790/


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