Home » Psychology news » Why the mirror lies: In people with body dysmorphic disorder, distorted self-image could be result of brain’s abnormal processing of visual input
Why the mirror lies: In people with body dysmorphic disorder, distorted self-image could be result of brain’s abnormal processing of visual input
February 3, 2010 by NewsBot
Researchers have determined that the brains of people with body dysmorphic disorder (BDD), a psychiatric condition that causes them, wrongly, to believe they appear disfigured and ugly, have abnormalities in processing visual input when it comes to examining their own face. Further, they found that the same systems of the brain are overactive in BDD and in obsessive-compulsive disorder, suggesting a link between the two.