PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

People with body-image disorders process 'big picture' visual information abnormally

2011-05-27
(Press-News.org) People suffering from body dysmorphic disorder, or BDD — a severe mental illness characterized by debilitating misperceptions that one appears disfigured and ugly — process visual information abnormally, even when looking at inanimate objects, according to a new UCLA study.

First author Dr. Jamie Feusner, a UCLA assistant professor of psychiatry, and colleagues found that patients with the disorder have less brain activity when processing holistic visual elements that provide the "big picture," regardless of whether that picture is a face or an object.

The research appears in the current online edition of the journal Psychological Medicine.

"No study until this one has investigated the brain's activity for visually processing objects in people with BDD," said Feusner, director of the Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder Intensive Treatment Program at UCLA. "This is an important step to figuring out what's going wrong in the brains of people with BDD so we can develop treatments to change their perceptions of themselves."

People with BDD tend to fixate on minute details, such as a single blemish or a slight crook to the nose, rather than viewing their face as a whole. The impact of the disorder can be debilitating. Sufferers think obsessively about their appearance and engage in repetitive, time-consuming behaviors, such as checking their appearance in the mirror. Many are too embarrassed to leave the house, some have repeated and unnecessary plastic surgeries, and still others can become suicidal. BDD affects an estimated 2 percent of the population and is thought to be especially common in people with obsessive-compulsive disorder.

The study compared 14 BDD patients, both men and women, with 14 healthy controls. Researchers used a type of brain scan called functional MRI (fMRI) to scan subjects while they viewed digital photographs of houses that were either unaltered or altered in ways to parse out different elements of visual processing. One altered set of images included very fine details, such as the shingles on the roof. The other altered images had very little detail and just showed things "holistically," such as the general shape of the house and the doors and windows.

The researchers found that the BDD patients had abnormal brain activation patterns when viewing pictures of the less-detailed houses: The regions of their brains that process these visual elements showed less activation than the healthy controls. In addition, the more severe their BDD symptoms, the lower the brain activity in the areas responsible for processing the image holistically.

"The study suggests that BDD patients have general abnormalities in visual processing," Feusner said. "But we haven't yet determined whether abnormal visual processing contributes as a cause to developing BDD or is the effect of having BDD. So it's the chicken-or-the-egg phenomenon.

"Many psychological researchers have long believed that people with body-image problems such as eating disorders only have distorted thoughts about their appearance, rather than having problems in the visual cortex, which precedes conscious thought. This study, along with our previous ones, shows that people with BDD have imbalances in the way they see details versus the big picture when viewing themselves, others and even inanimate objects."

Thirty percent of people with BDD also suffer from eating disorders, which are also linked to having a distorted self-image. Feusner is now enrolling anorexia nervosa patients to study whether they have abnormalities in the way they process visual information, to compare them with BDD patients. He plans to use this information to develop treatments to help people reconfigure the way they perceive themselves.

INFORMATION:

Other authors of the study were Hayley Moller and Teena Moody of UCLA, and Emily Hembacher of the University of California, Davis. Funding was provided by the National Institute for Mental Health. The authors report no conflict of interest.

The UCLA Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences is the home within the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA for faculty who are experts in the origins and treatment of disorders of complex human behavior. The department is part of the Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior at UCLA, a world-leading interdisciplinary research and education institute devoted to the understanding of complex human behavior and the causes and consequences of neuropsychiatric disorders.

For more news, visit the UCLA Newsroom and UCLA News|Week and follow us on Twitter.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

5 new hot spots where medicine and technology will converge

5 new hot spots where medicine and technology will converge
2011-05-27
Medicine and technology are converging in patient care at a faster pace than most people realize. Space age advancements from point-of-care health technologies like telemedicine to medical robots performing surgery are fast becoming commonplace in many hospitals. What's next? Ask NJIT Distinguished Professor Atam Dhawan, an electrical engineer and associate dean of the NJIT Albert Dorman Honors College, chair of the the IEEE emerging technology committee, and workshop chair for the upcoming 33rd IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (EMBS) Annual International ...

Pan American Metals Pleased to Announce Gold and Silver Once Again the 'Safe Haven' Choice

2011-05-27
Market reports May 24 showed that gold and silver had regained their standing as 'safe haven' investments, with gold remaining comfortably above the $1500 an ounce benchmark, closing the day at $1523, the highest price for three weeks. Silver has also bounced back to close, May 24, at $36.12. Mounting concerns over European debt following rumors of a Greek default helped drive investors back toward the 'safety net' of precious metals. The UK, Italy, Spain and Portugal were causing concern as they faced reduced credit ratings and, in the case of Spain, a change of government. ...

Green and lean: Secreting bacteria eliminate cost barriers for renewable biofuel production

Green and lean: Secreting bacteria eliminate cost barriers for renewable biofuel production
2011-05-27
TEMPE, Ariz.- A Biodesign Institute at Arizona State University research team has developed a process that removes a key obstacle to producing low-cost, renewable biofuels from bacteria. The team has reprogrammed photosynthetic microbes to secrete high-energy fats, making byproduct recovery and conversion to biofuels easier and potentially more commercially viable. "The real costs involved in any biofuel production are harvesting the goodies and turning them into fuel," said Roy Curtiss, of the Institute's Center for Infectious Diseases and Vaccinology and professor ...

LateRooms.com - An Evening with the Legendary John Cleese Comes to Liverpool

2011-05-27
Liverpool welcomes An Evening with the Legendary John Cleese to the Empire Theatre at the end of the month. Few comedians can claim to have had such a huge impact on the British canon of comedy as Cleese, who made his name in Monty Python's Flying Circus and Fawlty Towers. With scenes like the 'Dead Parrot Sketch' and his hilarious silly walks, the 71-year-old has become a national treasure. People heading to the show in Liverpool on May 31st can expect to enjoy his trademark sense of humour combined with insight into his long and successful career. Speaking ...

Cancer cells accelerate aging and inflammation in the body to drive tumor growth

2011-05-27
PHILADELPHIA— Researchers at the Kimmel Cancer Center at Jefferson have shed new light on the longstanding conundrum about what makes a tumor grow—and how to make it stop. Interestingly, cancer cells accelerate the aging of nearby connective tissue cells to cause inflammation, which ultimately provides "fuel" for the tumor to grow and even metastasize. This revealing symbiotic process, which is similar to how muscle and brain cells communicate with the body, could prove useful for developing new drugs to prevent and treat cancers. In this simple model, our bodies provide ...

Rendezvous with an asteroid

2011-05-27
TEMPE, Ariz. – A newly announced NASA mission to collect a sample of an asteroid and return it to Earth will include an instrument built at Arizona State University's School of Earth and Space Exploration (SESE). The ASU instrument will analyze long-wavelength infrared light emitted from the asteroid to map the minerals on its surface. The device is a modified version of the highly successful miniature infrared spectrometers carried on Spirit and Opportunity, NASA's twin Mars Exploration Rovers. The new asteroid sample-return mission is called OSIRIS-REx, an acronym standing ...

LateRooms.com - Seville to Stage Verdi's Don Carlo

2011-05-27
The Teatro de la Maestranza in Seville will stage a production of Giuseppe Verdi's Don Carlo this summer. It will be performed four times between June 24th and July 3rd with musical accompaniment by the Real Orquesta Sinfonica de Sevilla. The powerful story, which paints Spain's Phillip II as a cruel tyrant, is one of the composer's most acclaimed pieces. In Seville, Pedro Halffter takes on directorial duties, while the cast is led by Fiorenza Cedolins, Dolora Zajick and Walter Fraccaro as the titular character. The plot revolves around Don Carlo's wife-to-be ...

Researchers butter up the old 'scratch test' to make it tough

Researchers butter up the old scratch test to make it tough
2011-05-27
It might not seem like scraping the top of a cold stick of butter with a knife could be a scientific test, but engineers at MIT say the process is very similar to the "scratch test," which is perhaps the oldest known way to assess a material's hardness and strength — or, in scientific language, its resistance to deformation. Using the scraping of butter as a starting point, the engineers launched a study to see if the age-old scratch test could be used to determine a material's toughness, or how well it resists fracturing after a small crack has already formed. The answer: ...

LateRooms.com - Notre Dame de Paris to be Staged at Milan's San Siro Stadium

2011-05-27
The huge San Siro stadium will host two performances of the hit opera production Notre Dame de Paris next month. Officially known as Stadio Giuseppe Meazza, AC Milan and Inter Milan's football stadium will be transformed into a concert venue for the shows on June 29th and 30th. Notre Dame de Paris has been a consistent success since first being performed in 2001 and it is celebrating its tenth anniversary by going on tour. However, production values will not be compromised, with a huge cast and a complex staging system all being brought to entertain the Milan audience. Tickets ...

New study suggests link between estrogen exposure, high blood pressure

New study suggests link between estrogen exposure, high blood pressure
2011-05-27
EAST LANSING, Mich. — While recent studies have shown long-term exposure to estrogen can be a danger to women – overturning physicians' long-held beliefs that the hormone was good for their patients' hearts – the process by which estrogen induces high blood pressure was unclear. In a new study, Michigan State University researchers found long-term estrogen exposure generates excessive levels of the compound superoxide, which causes stress in the body. The buildup of this compound occurs in an area of the brain that is crucial to regulating blood pressure, suggesting that ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Extended Paxlovid may help some people with long COVID

Media coverage of civilian casualties in allied countries boosts support for U.S. involvement

Marked decrease in Arctic pressure ridges

Age matters: Kidney disorder indicator gains precision

New guidelines for managing blood cancers in pregnancy

New study suggests RNA present on surfaces of leaves may shape microbial communities

U.S. suffers from low social mobility. Is sprawl partly to blame?

Research spotlight: Improving predictions about brain cancer outcomes with the right imaging criteria

New UVA professor’s research may boost next-generation space rockets

Multilingualism improves crucial cognitive functions in autistic children

The carbon in our bodies probably left the galaxy and came back on cosmic ‘conveyer belt’

Scientists unveil surprising human vs mouse differences in a major cancer immunotherapy target

NASA’s LEXI will provide X-ray vision of Earth’s magnetosphere

A successful catalyst design for advanced zinc-iodine batteries

AMS Science Preview: Tall hurricanes, snow and wildfire

Study finds 25% of youth experienced homelessness in Denver in 2021, significantly higher than known counts

Integrated spin-wave quantum memory

Brain study challenges long-held views about Parkinson's movement disorders

Mental disorders among offspring prenatally exposed to systemic glucocorticoids

Trends in screening for social risk in physician practices

Exposure to school racial segregation and late-life cognitive outcomes

AI system helps doctors identify patients at risk for suicide

Advanced imaging uncovers hidden metastases in high-risk prostate cancer cases

Study reveals oldest-known evolutionary “arms race”

People find medical test results hard to understand, increasing overall worry

Mizzou researchers aim to reduce avoidable hospitalizations for nursing home residents with dementia

National Diabetes Prevention Program saves costs for enrollees

Research team to study critical aspects of Alzheimer’s and dementia healthcare delivery

Major breakthrough for ‘smart cell’ design

From CO2 to acetaldehyde: Towards greener industrial chemistry

[Press-News.org] People with body-image disorders process 'big picture' visual information abnormally