Quantification of body ownership awareness induced by the visual movement illusion of the lower limbs: a study of electroencephalogram and surface electromyography

The visual movement illusion (VMI) is a subjective experience. This illusion is produced by watching the subject’s motion video. At the same time, VMI evokes awareness of body ownership. We applied the power spectral density (PSD) matrix and the partial directed correlation (PDC) matrix to build the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Medical & biological engineering & computing 2023-05, Vol.61 (5), p.951-965
Hauptverfasser: Li, Jing, Wang, Junhong, Wang, Ting, Kong, Wanzeng, Xi, Xugang
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The visual movement illusion (VMI) is a subjective experience. This illusion is produced by watching the subject’s motion video. At the same time, VMI evokes awareness of body ownership. We applied the power spectral density (PSD) matrix and the partial directed correlation (PDC) matrix to build the PPDC matrix for the γ 2 band (34–98.5 Hz), combining cerebral cortical and musculomotor cortical complexity and PPDC to quantify the degree of body ownership. Thirty-five healthy subjects were recruited to participate in this experiment. The subjects’ electroencephalography (EEG) and surface electromyography (sEMG) data were recorded under resting conditions, observation conditions, illusion conditions, and actual seated front-kick movements. The results show the following: (1) VMI activates the cerebral cortex to some extent; (2) VMI enhances cortical muscle excitability in the rectus femoris and medial vastus muscles; (3) VMI induces a sense of body ownership; (4) the use of PPDC values, fuzzy entropy values of muscles, and fuzzy entropy values of the cerebral cortex can quantify whether VMI induces awareness of body ownership. These results illustrate that PPDC can be used as a biomarker to show that VMI affects changes in the cerebral cortex and as a quantitative tool to show whether body ownership awareness arises. Graphical abstract
ISSN:0140-0118
1741-0444
DOI:10.1007/s11517-022-02744-4