Developing and testing a novel neuroscience hypothesis for the psychogenesis of disordered body image and agency in relationally disordered patients
Mizen, S
Date: 8 July 2024
Thesis or dissertation
Publisher
University of Exeter
Degree Title
PhD in Psychology
Abstract
Patients with severe Personality Disorders (PD) present with co-morbid conditions, eating
disorders, psychosomatic disorders, autistic traits and substance misuse. These complex
presentations lead to long term hospitalisation. Symptom specific specialist services are ill-
equipped to address such trans-diagnostic problems. A new ...
Patients with severe Personality Disorders (PD) present with co-morbid conditions, eating
disorders, psychosomatic disorders, autistic traits and substance misuse. These complex
presentations lead to long term hospitalisation. Symptom specific specialist services are ill-
equipped to address such trans-diagnostic problems. A new psychotherapeutic approach the
Relational Affective Model has been developed for severe PD patients based on a novel
psychoanalytic and neuroscientific Relational Affective Hypothesis (RAH). This hypothesis links
early relational adversity with narcissistic defences giving rise to disordered interpersonal
relating and relating to the body. An associated neural Implicit Psychogenesis Hypothesis (IPH),
proposes unconscious narcissistic conflicts lead to adjustments in precision in the Internal
Generative Model of the Minimal Self and consequently a disordered sense of body ownership
and agency in patients with narcissistic disorders (Personality Disorders). This change at the
neural level results in eating disorders and functional motor disorders respectively. Together
these two hypotheses explain how psychological defences give rise to somatic symptoms.
In this thesis the hypotheses are critically evaluated alongside existing models of eating
disorders and functional motor disorders. Study findings are presented in four domains,
symptoms, describing the clinical characteristics of participants, developmental trajectories
describing predisposing and precipitating factors, disorders in Self Other Distinction
investigated using a behavioural Emotional Egocentricity Bias task and finally the fMRI findings
which were investigated using the Interpersonal Relations Picture Set paradigm.
The findings lend support to the RAH and IPH identifying the role of unconscious psychological
conflicts in disrupting Self-Other Distinction and reduced activation in brain region implicated in
the sense of body ownership in patients with eating disorders and sense of agency in patients
with functional motor disorders. The implications of these findings for our understanding of the
relationship between mind and body and the development of new therapeutic interventions for
patients with psychosomatic presentations are discussed.
Doctoral Theses
Doctoral College
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