posted on 2023-05-19, 20:46authored byStephen, ID, Sturman, D, Stevenson, RJ, Jon MondJon Mond, Brooks, KR
Body size misperception - the belief that one is larger or smaller than reality - affects a large and growing segment of the population. Recently, studies have shown that exposure to extreme body stimuli results in a shift in the point of subjective normality, suggesting that visual adaptation may be a mechanism by which body size misperception occurs. Yet, despite being exposed to a similar set of bodies, some individuals within a given geographical area will develop body size misperception and others will not. The reason for these individual difference is currently unknown. One possible explanation stems from the observation that women with lower levels of body satisfaction have been found to pay more attention to images of thin bodies. However, while attention has been shown to enhance visual adaptation effects in low (e.g. rotational and linear motion) and high level stimuli (e.g., facial gender), it is not known whether this effect exists in visual adaptation to body size. Here, we test the hypothesis that there is an indirect effect of body satisfaction on the direction and magnitude of the body fat adaptation effect, mediated via visual attention (i.e., selectively attending to images of thin over fat bodies or vice versa). Significant mediation effects were found in both men and women, suggesting that observers' level of body satisfaction may influence selective visual attention to thin or fat bodies, which in turn influences the magnitude and direction of visual adaptation to body size. This may provide a potential mechanism by which some individuals develop body size misperception - a risk factor for eating disorders, compulsive exercise behaviour and steroid abuse - while others do not.
History
Publication title
PLoS One
Volume
13
Article number
e0189855
Number
e0189855
Pagination
1-14
ISSN
1932-6203
Department/School
School of Health Sciences
Publisher
Public Library of Science
Place of publication
United States
Rights statement
Copyright 2018 Stephen et al. Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/