Auditory-induced body distortions in children and adults

Recent studies have shown that body-representations can be altered by dynamic changes in sound. In the so-called “auditory Pinocchio illusion” participants feel their finger to be longer when the action of pulling their finger is paired with a rising pitch. Here, we investigated whether preschool ch...

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Veröffentlicht in:Scientific reports 2020-02, Vol.10 (1), p.3024-3024, Article 3024
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description Recent studies have shown that body-representations can be altered by dynamic changes in sound. In the so-called “auditory Pinocchio illusion” participants feel their finger to be longer when the action of pulling their finger is paired with a rising pitch. Here, we investigated whether preschool children - an age group in which multisensory body-representations are still fine-tuning - are also sensitive to this illusion. In two studies, sixty adult and sixty child participants heard sounds rising or falling in pitch while the experimenter concurrently pulled or pressed their index finger on a vertical (Experiment 1) or horizontal axis (Experiment 2). Results showed that the illusion was subjected to axis and age: both adults and children reported their finger to be longer in Experiment 1, but not in Experiment 2. However, while in adults the feeling of finger elongation corresponded to a recalibration of the fingertip’s felt position upwards, this was not the case in children, who presented a dissociation between the feeling of finger elongation and the perceived fingertip position. Our results reveal that the ‘auditory Pinocchio illusion’ is constrained to the vertical dimension and suggest that multisensory interactions differently contribute to subjective feelings and sense of position depending on developmental stage.
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subjects 631/378/3917
631/477/2811
Acoustic Stimulation
Adolescent
Adult
Child
Child, Preschool
Children
Developmental stages
Elongation
Experiments
Female
Finger
Fingers - physiology
Frequency
Hearing
Humanities and Social Sciences
Humans
Illusions
Male
multidisciplinary
Science
Science (multidisciplinary)
Surveys and Questionnaires
Young Adult
title Auditory-induced body distortions in children and adults
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