Feeling Fat (or Thin) May Be a Trick of the Mind
Copyright 2005 Daily News Central
Whether you feel fat, thin or something in between has little to
do with the reality of the situation, suggests a new study led
by the University College London (UCL) and published in the
journal Public Library of Science Biology. A person's self-image
is an illusion constructed in the brain, the researchers say.
Dr. Henrik Ehrsson of the UCL Institute of Neurology and
colleagues used a trick called "the Pinocchio illusion" to give
study volunteers the sensation that their waists were shrinking.
They used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to scan
the participants' brains during the experience and observe which
parts of the brain are involved in body image.
The results may shed some light on anorexia, an eating disorder,
and body dysmorphic disorder. People with the latter condition
typically are overconcerned about a small or imagined defect in
their body, and they frequently overestimate or underestimate
their actual body size.
Brain Creates a Map of the Body
A vibrating device placed on each study volunteer's wrist served
to stimulate the tendon and create the sensation that the joint
was flexing, even though it remained stationary. When their
hands touched their waists, the volunteers felt their wrists
bending, creating the illusion that their waists were shrinking.
During the tendon exercise, all 17 participants felt that their
waist had shrunk by up to 28 percent. The researchers found high
levels of activity in the posterior parietal cortex, an area of
the brain that integrates sensory information from different
parts of the body. Volunteers who reported the strongest
shrinking sensation also showed the strongest activity in this
area of the brain.
"We process information about our body size every day, such as
feeling thin or fat when we put our clothes on in the morning,
or when walking through a narrow doorway or ducking under a low
ceiling," says Dr. Ehrsson.
"However -- unlike more elementary bodily senses such as limb
movement, touch and pain -- there are no specialized receptors
in the body that send information to the brain about the size
and shape of body parts. Instead, the brain appears to create a
map of the body by integrating signals from the relevant body
parts, such as skin, joints and muscles, along with visual
cues," Dr. Ehrsson adds.
Alice in Wonderland Syndrome
"Other studies have shown that people with injuries in the
parietal cortex area of the brain experience the feeling that
the size and shape of their body parts have changed. People who
suffer from migraine with aura can sometimes experience a
phenomenon called the 'Alice in Wonderland syndrome,' where they
feel that various body parts are shrinking," notes. Dr. Ehrsson.
"This could also be linked to the same region of the brain," he
points out.
"In addition, people with anorexia and body dysmorphic disorder
who have problems with judging the size of their body might
similarily have a distorted representation of their body image
in the parietal cortex. These are areas which would be worth
exploring in future research, to establish whether this region
of the brain is involved in anorexia and the rare but peculiar
shrinking symptoms of some migraines," Dr. Ehrsson concludes.