Body-ownership for actively operated non-corporeal objects
•Humans perceive body ownership for virtual size-modulated balloons.•Humans perceive body ownership for virtual color-modulated squares.•Perceived ownership was not any weaker than for virtual hands.•Connectedness between real body and virtual objects boosted ownership. Rubber-hand and virtual-hand...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Consciousness and cognition 2015-11, Vol.36, p.75-86 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •Humans perceive body ownership for virtual size-modulated balloons.•Humans perceive body ownership for virtual color-modulated squares.•Perceived ownership was not any weaker than for virtual hands.•Connectedness between real body and virtual objects boosted ownership.
Rubber-hand and virtual-hand illusions show that people can perceive body ownership for objects under suitable conditions. Bottom-up approaches assume that perceived ownership emerges from multisensory matching (e.g., between seen object and felt hand movements), whereas top-down approaches claim that novel body parts are integrated only if they resemble some part of a permanent internal body representation. We demonstrate that healthy adults perceive body ownership for a virtual balloon changing in size, and a virtual square changing in size or color, in synchrony with movements of their real hand. This finding is inconsistent with top-down approaches and amounts to an existence proof that non-corporeal events can be perceived as body parts if their changes are systematically related to one’s actions. It also implies that previous studies with passive-stimulation techniques might have underestimated the plasticity of body representations and put too much emphasis on the resemblance between viewed object and real hand. |
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ISSN: | 1053-8100 1090-2376 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.concog.2015.06.003 |