Social experiments have become a very popular way to make a statement in this digital era. The response to one such experiment from one brave Boise, Idaho woman has recently caught a lot of attention.

On August 29, Amy Pence-Brown became inspired to follow through with an idea she got from an Australian group called the Liberators International. She performed her own experiment. She stripped down to just a bikini and stood blindfolded in a public space. Next to her stood a sign that read, "I'm standing for anyone who has struggled with a self-esteem issue like me, because all bodies are valuable. To support self-acceptance, draw a heart on my body."

Amy also provided people with markers to write or draw whatever they wanted on her body. Despite being nervous, Amy believed the experiment much too important for body image acceptance and feminism. She was less concerned that people would say nasty and hurtful things than she was that people would not react to her at all.

Radical Self-Acceptance: An Experiment/Performance by Amy Pence-Brown from Melanie Flitton Folwell on Vimeo.

"Almost immediately a sense that something extraordinary was happening washed over me," Pence-Brown told TODAY.

The response she received was better than she could have even expected. Not only did countless people draw hearts on her body, but they praised her courage and presented her with gifts. While the conclusion was similar in the Liberators International experiment, Amy was skeptical, as she was considerably older and larger than the group's female subject.

Amy described the experience as a full-on success and very emotional. Through this, she was able to form friendships and inspire people from all different walks of life.

"I feel like I've started a body love revolution," Pence-Brown said.