Multisensory integration, body representation and somatic symptom experience in the general populationTools Ratcliffe, Natasha (2017) Multisensory integration, body representation and somatic symptom experience in the general population. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham.
AbstractExperience of the bodily self is dependent upon the integration of current sensory signals with existing knowledge and prior expectations about the body. As such, the way in which the self is perceived is not a direct reflection of the body’s actual state, but rather an interpretation of available sensory information. The phenomena of “medically unexplained symptoms” provide an illustration of this, whereby individuals experience subjectively real somatic symptoms despite the absence of any organic cause. The work in this thesis aimed to investigate how individuals experiencing somatic symptoms process multisensory information about the body and, more specifically, set out to test the hypothesis that symptom reporting is associated with a general tendency to over-weight top-down information during the process of body representation.
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