A systematic review of visual processing in body dysmorphic disorder (BDD)

•Visual processing outcomes in body dysmorphic disorder were characterised.•Most studies signal to visual disturbances in body dysmorphic disorder.•Inconsistencies may be attributed to discrepancies in samples and task design.•A coherent framework will aim to create clear and consistent behavioural...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychiatry research 2024-09, Vol.339, p.116013, Article 116013
Hauptverfasser: Virgili, Gemma, Neill, Erica, Enticott, Peter, Castle, David, Rossell, Susan Lee
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Visual processing outcomes in body dysmorphic disorder were characterised.•Most studies signal to visual disturbances in body dysmorphic disorder.•Inconsistencies may be attributed to discrepancies in samples and task design.•A coherent framework will aim to create clear and consistent behavioural patterns. To understand the visual preponderance of perceived flaws in appearance in body dysmorphic disorder (BDD), the study of visual processing has been growing. Studies have focused on facial and other basic visual stimuli. The current literature does not provide evidence of consistent behavioural patterns, lacking an overarching body of work describing visual processing in BDD. This systematic review aims to characterise behavioural outcomes of visual processing anomalies and/or deficits in BDD. Articles were collected through online databases MEDLINE and PubMed, and were included if they comprised a clinical BDD group, and were published after 1990. Results indicate that individuals with BDD demonstrate deficits in emotional face processing, a possible overreliance on detail processing, aberrant eye-scanning behaviours, and a tendency to overvalue attractiveness. While findings consistently signal towards visual deficits in BDD, there is lack of clarity as to the type. This inconsistency may be attributed to heterogeneity within BDD samples and differences in experimental design (i.e., stimuli, tasks, conditions). There are difficulties distinguishing between BDD-associated deficits and those associated with OCD or eating disorders. A coherent framework, including sample characterisation and task design will seek to generate clear and consistent behavioural patterns to guide future treatments.
ISSN:0165-1781
1872-7123
1872-7123
DOI:10.1016/j.psychres.2024.116013