Centre for Philosophical Psychology, Department of Philosophy, University of Antwerp, Antwerp, Belgium.
Lab for Autonomic Neuroscience, Imaging and Cognition (LANIC), Department of Psychosomatic Medicine and Psychotherapy, Jena University Hospital, Jena, Germany.
Int J Eat Disord. 2023 Nov;56(11):2149-2154. doi: 10.1002/eat.24030. Epub 2023 Aug 14.
Individuals diagnosed with anorexia nervosa (AN) often report seeing themselves as overweight. While body size estimation tasks suggest that such individuals overestimate their body size, these tasks have failed to establish whether this misestimation stems from visual misperception. Misestimation might, instead, be due to response bias. We designed a paradigm to distinguish between visual and response bias contributions to body size misestimation: the symmetrical body size estimation (s-BSE) paradigm.
The s-BSE paradigm involves two tasks. In the conventional task, participants estimate the width of their photographed body by adjusting the size of a rectangle to match. In the transposed task, participants adjust the size of a photograph of their body to match the rectangle. If overestimation stems exclusively from visual misperception, then errors in each task would be equal and opposite. Using this paradigm, we compared the performance of women diagnosed with AN (n = 14) against women without any eating disorder (n = 40).
In the conventional task, we replicated previous findings indicating that both women with AN and women without any eating disorder overestimate their body size. In the transposed task, neither group adjusted the bodies to be narrower than the rectangle. Participants with AN set their photographs to be significantly wider.
While we replicated previous findings of body size overestimation amongst women with AN and those without any eating disorder, our results are inconsistent with the hypothesis that such overestimation stems exclusively from visual misperception and instead suggest a substantial response bias effect.
Women with anorexia nervosa overestimate their own body size. Research has not yet determined whether this overestimation stems from them seeing themselves as larger or other, non-visual factors. We employ a new method for distinguishing these possibilities and find that non-visual factors influence size estimates for women with and without anorexia nervosa. This method can help future research control for non-perceptual influences on participant responses.
被诊断患有神经性厌食症 (AN) 的个体常报告自己超重。尽管身体大小估计任务表明,这些个体高估了自己的身体大小,但这些任务未能确定这种误估计是源于视觉感知错误还是反应偏差。误估计可能是由于反应偏差所致。我们设计了一种范式来区分身体大小误估计中视觉和反应偏差的贡献:对称身体大小估计 (s-BSE) 范式。
s-BSE 范式涉及两个任务。在常规任务中,参与者通过调整矩形的大小来匹配来估计自己照片中身体的宽度。在转换任务中,参与者调整自己身体照片的大小以匹配矩形。如果高估完全源于视觉感知错误,那么每个任务中的错误将相等且相反。使用该范式,我们比较了患有 AN 的女性(n=14)和没有任何饮食障碍的女性(n=40)的表现。
在常规任务中,我们复制了先前的发现,表明患有 AN 的女性和没有任何饮食障碍的女性都高估了自己的身体大小。在转换任务中,两个组都没有将身体调整得比矩形窄。患有 AN 的参与者将自己的照片设置得明显更宽。
虽然我们复制了先前关于患有 AN 的女性和没有任何饮食障碍的女性身体大小高估的发现,但我们的结果与这种高估完全源于视觉感知错误的假设不一致,而是表明存在大量的反应偏差效应。
患有神经性厌食症的女性高估了自己的身体大小。研究尚未确定这种高估是源于她们认为自己更大还是其他非视觉因素。我们采用了一种新方法来区分这些可能性,并发现非视觉因素会影响患有和不患有神经性厌食症的女性的大小估计。这种方法可以帮助未来的研究控制参与者反应中非感知因素的影响。