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190605

Haptic perception in anorexia nervosa

Martin Grunwald

pp. 335-351

Abstract

In the mid 1990s we, at the Institute for Neurophysiology at the. Friedrich Schiller University in Jena, Germany, conducted psycho-physiological trials into brain electrical changes during haptic examination [1, 2]. The experimental task consisted of having subjects haptically explore sunken reliefs with closed eyes and then reproduce the image presented upon them afterwards with their eyes open. The aim was to analyse the stimuli-dependant changes in the subjects EEG. The more than 30 probands in this trial had, as expected, no major problems meeting this demand. However, much to our surprise, one test subject was completely unable to perform the task. Her exploratory times were much longer than the average. Despite this, the drawn reproductions that she produced showed that her perception of the stimuli's entire structure was completely false and distorted.

Publication details

Published in:

Grunwald Martin (2008) Human haptic perception: basics and applications. Dordrecht, Springer.

Pages: 335-351

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-7643-7612-3_28

Full citation:

Grunwald Martin (2008) „Haptic perception in anorexia nervosa“, In: M. Grunwald (ed.), Human haptic perception, Dordrecht, Springer, 335–351.