Anatomical Rorschach Responses of Gravely Psychosomatic Patients

1984 ◽  
Vol 59 (1) ◽  
pp. 337-338 ◽  
Author(s):  
Juhani Ihanus

In all four groups of 97 gravely psychosomatic patients the scores of the anatomical Rorschach responses are higher than the reference value, the responses being mostly of the bony/skeletal type. At responses can give information of issues related to the body self and disorders in body image, self-awareness, self-concept, or individual identity.

2015 ◽  
Vol 46 (1) ◽  
pp. 104-111 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anna Brytek-Matera ◽  
Anna Kozieł

Abstract The purposes of the present study were to explore the relationship between body awareness and negative body attitude, interoceptive body awareness and physical self in women practicing fitness as well as to analyze the determinants of body awareness. The Body Awareness Questionnaire, the Multidimensional Assessment of Interoceptive Awareness, the Physical Self-Description Questionnaire and the Body Attitude Test were applied to 43 women practicing fitness and 32 non-fitness practitioners. Bodily self-awareness was connected with greater fitness practitioners’ interoceptive body awareness and greater physical self. Noticing and global esteem predicted body awareness in women practicing fitness.


1990 ◽  
Vol 55 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 135-144 ◽  
Author(s):  
Timothy A. Brown ◽  
Thomas F. Cash ◽  
Peter J. Mikulka

2014 ◽  
Vol 49 (3) ◽  
pp. 406-410 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cherilyn N. McLester ◽  
Robin Hardin ◽  
Stephanie Hoppe

Context: Research has suggested that the prevalence of young women with eating disorders (EDs) is increasing, but determining the exact prevalence of EDs within the female student–athlete (FS-A) population is difficult. Looking at certain traits may help us to identify their level of susceptibility to developing an ED. Objective: To determine the susceptibility of FS-As to EDs in relation to self-concept, including self-esteem and body image. Design: Cross-sectional study. Setting: Athletic training and health centers at National Collegiate Athletic Association Division I, II, and III institutions via e-mail questionnaire correspondence. Patients or Other Participants: A total of 439 FS-As from 17 participating institutions completed the questionnaires. The sample was primarily white (83.1%) and underclass (61.8%). Main Outcome Measure(s): The questionnaire consisted of 4 parts: 3 subscales of the Eating Disorder Inventory-2, the Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale, the Body Cathexis Scale, and demographic items. Results: A total of 6.8% of FS-As were susceptible to anorexia and 1.8% were susceptible to bulimia. The majority of FS-As (61%) reported normal self-esteem levels, whereas 29.4% had high self-esteem. Overall, 64.5% were satisfied and 23% were very satisfied with their body image. Conclusions: These results are generally positive in that they suggest FS-As have high levels of self-concept and are at low risk to develop EDs. However, these findings do not mean that all concerns should be dismissed. Although more than 90% of the respondents were not susceptible to an ED, there are still FS-As who may be. Athletic departments should evaluate their FS-As' levels of self-concept so that their susceptibility to EDs can be addressed. The emotional aspect of health care should be included in providing holistic care for student–athletes. Athletic trainers often are the primary health care providers for FS-As, so they should be made aware of this concern.


Philosophies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 100
Author(s):  
Brentyn J. Ramm

Douglas Harding developed a unique first-person experimental approach for investigating consciousness that is still relatively unknown in academia. In this paper, I present a critical dialogue between Harding, Sartre and Merleau-Ponty on the phenomenology of the body and intersubjectivity. Like Sartre and Merleau-Ponty, Harding observes that from the first-person perspective, I cannot see my own head. He points out that visually speaking nothing gets in the way of others. I am radically open to others and the world. Neither does my somatic experience establish a boundary between me and the world. Rather to experience these sensations as part of a bounded, shaped thing (a body), already involves bringing in the perspectives of others. The reader is guided through a series of Harding’s first-person experiments to test these phenomenological claims for themselves. For Sartre, the other’s subjectivity is known through The Look, which makes me into a mere object for them. Merleau-Ponty criticised Sartre for making intersubjective relations primarily ones of conflict. Rather he held that the intentionality of my body is primordially interconnected with that of others’ bodies. We are already situated in a shared social world. For Harding, like Sartre, my consciousness is a form of nothingness; however, in contrast to Sartre, it does not negate the world, but is absolutely united with it. Confrontation is a delusion that comes from imagining that I am behind a face. Rather in lived personal relationships, I become the other. I conclude by arguing that for Harding all self-awareness is a form of other-awareness, and vice versa.


Author(s):  
Marina Medici Loureiro Subtil ◽  
Mariane Lima DeSouza ◽  
Alexsandro Luiz DeAndrade

Introdução: Considerando evidências de estudos anteriores que indicam uma relação entre a representação multisensorial do corpo e a percepção da dor, sugere-se que a autoconsciência corporal seja uma variável relevante na avaliação da saúde desses indivíduos. Objetivo: desenvolver e levantar evidências de validade de uma bateria de escalas psicométricas que avaliam a autoconsciência corporal relacionada aos aspectos ergonômicos e saúde da atividade musical. Método: 415 estudantes universitários de música participaram da pesquisa. A partir de um estudo transversal com delineamento de survey foram levantadas evidências da validade do tipo conceitual, dos itens e construto. Resultados: a versão final da bateria apresenta três escalas: 1) Escala de Autoconsciência Corporal de Músicos; 2) Escala de Autopercepção de Dor e Performance e; 3) Escala de Aspectos Preventivos. Aspectos relacionados à teorização do construto autoconsciência corporal com foco nas possibilidades de avaliação dos fatores psicossociais, associados à prevenção da dor são discutidos. Conclusão: a estruturação das três escalas desenvolvidas fornecem evidências de que os aspectos ergonômicos em saúde do músico, incluindo as dimensões física, cognitiva e organizacional devem fazer parte de medidas psicométricas destinadas às avaliações clínicas dessa população. Abstract Introduction: Considering the evidence of the relationship between the multisensory representation of the body and the perception of pain, it is suggested that body self-consciousness is a relevant variable in the evaluation of the health of musicians. Objective: to develop and to raise evidences of the conceptual, item and construct validity of a psychometric scale that evaluates the body self-consciousness and the ergonomic / health aspects of the musicians. Method: A crosssectional quantitative study with a survey design for the development of a psychometric instrument. 415 university students of music participated. The data were analyzed with the aid of the Statistical Package for the Social Sciences, R software and by factor analysis. Results: the final version of the instrument presents three scales: 1) Body Self-Awereness Scale of Musicians; 2) Self-perception of Pain and Performance Scale; 3) Scale of Preventive Aspects. The structuring of the three scales reinforces the hypothesis that the ergonomic aspects of the musician's health, including the physical, cognitive and organizational dimensions, should be part of the psychometric measures for this occupational task. Conclusion: the Body Self-Consciousness and Musician's Health Battery proved to be a suitable psychometric measure for the clinical evaluation of this population.  Keywords: ergonomics; body self-consciousness; musculoskeletal pain; health of the musician.


Author(s):  
Soroor Arabpour Khanmirzaei ◽  
Mahdi Zare Bahramabadi ◽  
Fatemeh Khoramian

Introduction: In this study the effect of psychodrama on body image of female students at secondary school has been examined. Method: In this quasi experimental study, all the female students at secondary school who were studying at high school in academic year 2016-2017 in Tehran were selected as a statistical society. Among the high schools in Tehran's 15th district, one school was selected by Purposive sampling method. They were examined by the Multidimensional Body-Self Relationships Questionnaire (MBSRQ). 24 female students were randomly selected and assigned to experimental and control groups. Then, 8 sessions of 1.5 hours of psychodrama were performed for the experimental group, but the control group did not receive any intervention. In addition to descriptive statistics, Multivariate analysis of covariance were performed to evaluate the effectiveness of the psychodrama on the body image of students and the SPSS-25 software was used for all the analyses (p>0.05. ( Results: In this analysis, the second-year high school student participants were adolescent girls with an average age of 14.34 years. The results the study showed The Mean ±SD of physical satisfaction component had more change from pre-test (25.08± 3.65) to post-test (32.50 ±4.85). Moreover, The Mean ±SD of the body image increased from pre-test (144.50 ±12.33) to post-test (16.165 ± 12.96). Conclusion: Psychodrama had remarkable improvement on body image of female students who were selected in this research


1968 ◽  
Vol 114 (507) ◽  
pp. 233-237
Author(s):  
G. J. Tucker ◽  
R. F. Reinhardt ◽  
N. B. Clarke

The concept of the ‘body image’ rests on a broad foundation of neurological and psychological observations. Neurological observations of phantom limbs, agnosias, apraxias, and similar phenomena led to an initial formulation of the body image as a postural, spatial image of the body (2, 6). Schilder greatly expanded the concept by delineating the importance of libidinal (instinctual) and sociological factors in the make-up of the body image (7). Current psychiatric usage has (perhaps too loosely) equated the term body image with phrases such as 'self system’, 'self concept’, ‘ego identity’, etc. (8). The importance of the body image as a postural or spatial model, a ‘base of operations' from which a person extends himself into space, with its implications for movement and motor activity, is often overlooked but vividly evident in many endeavours, particularly aviation.


Author(s):  
Alessandra Amato ◽  
Patrizia Proia ◽  
Gaetano Felice Caldara ◽  
Angelina Alongi ◽  
Vincenzo Ferrantelli ◽  
...  

The beneficial effects of physical activity on body image perception and bone are debated among artistic gymnasts. Gymnasts seem to be at greater risk of developing body dissatisfaction, eating disorders and osteoporosis due to inadequate nutrition and attention to the appearance of the body. The objective of this work was to investigate the association between the artistic gymnast and a more favorable body image compared to their sedentary peers and if a preworkout high-carbohydrate meal (HCM; 300 kcal, 88% carbohydrates, 9% protein, 3% fat) or high-protein meal (HPM; 300 kcal, 55% carbohydrates, 31% protein, 13% fat) is able to attenuate bone resorption in young rhythmic gymnasts. Twenty-eight preadolescent female gymnasts were examined. Self-esteem tests were used to analyze body image perception. Preworkout eating habits were examined by short food frequency questions (FFQ) validated for children. The biomarker of the bone resorption C-terminal telopeptide region of collagen type 1 (CTX) was measured in the urine (fasting, postmeal and postworkout). Gymnasts reported higher satisfaction with their body appearance compared to sedentary peers. Of the gymnasts, 30% did not have a preworkout meal regularly, and the timing of the consumption was variable. Bone resorption was decreased by the HCM, consumed 90 min before the training, with respect to the HPM. The study suggests that playing artistic gymnastics is associated with a positive body self-perception in a child. The variability in preworkout meal frequency and timing need attention to prevent inadequate eating habits in light of the ability of the HCM to reduce acute bone resorption.


2020 ◽  
Vol 36 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ana Flávia de Sousa Silva ◽  
Camila Cremonezi Japur ◽  
Fernanda Rodrigues de Oliveira Penaforte

Abstract This integrative review of literature followed the PICO strategy to investigate the repercussions of the use of social networks on the body image of their users. PubMed, LILACS, PsycINFO and SciELO databases were included as well as articles published between January 2006 and February 2019. Thirty-three articles were analyzed, which compose the corpus of this review. The studies revealed that social networks have a predominantly negative repercussion on the body self-image of their users, increasing levels of body dissatisfaction, also having a negative impact on mood and self-esteem. Added to this, social networks influenced the body type that users would like to have, translated by the lean body profile, considered a model of beauty.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document