Psychosomatic Disorders and Their Treatments Open access Peer reviewed

Depersonalization, Emotion Embodiment, and Alexithymia in the General Population

Julia G. Lebovitz, Sohee Park

Psychopathology | Jun 18, 2026

Abstract

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Alterations in emotional experiences have been demonstrated in depersonalization-derealization disorder (DPD), typically highlighting a blunting of emotions and decreased ability to recognize and name emotions (i.e., alexithymia). However, less research has focused on how individuals with depersonalization experiences embody emotion states. Therefore, the present study investigated emotional embodiment and alexithymia in a general population sample with high (n = 33) and low (n = 66) levels of depersonalization. METHODS: Using a computerized topographical mapping task, the emBODY task, participants indicated where they experience sensations associated with specific emotion states. RESULTS: We found that increased depersonalization was associated with increased alexithymia. Individuals with higher levels of depersonalization showed qualitative differences in bodily sensation maps, including more diffused and less localized embodiment for certain high arousal emotion states. CONCLUSIONS: These findings emphasize that individuals with increased levels of depersonalization may not just experience a blanket numbing of emotions, but instead may have increased attunement to certain high arousal emotion states.

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Researchers on this paper

Julia G. Lebovitz

first | ORCID 0000-0002-6377-5706

Sohee Park

last | ORCID 0000-0003-3797-4776

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Citation

BibTeX

@article{Lebovitz2026Depersonalization,
  title = {Depersonalization, Emotion Embodiment, and Alexithymia in the General Population},
  author = {Julia G. Lebovitz and Sohee Park},
  journal = {Psychopathology},
  year = {2026},
  doi = {10.1159/000553161},
  url = {https://doi.org/10.1159/000553161}
}

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