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How to lose a hand: Sensory updating drives disembodiment

Roland Pfister, Annika L. Klaffehn, Andreas Kalckert, Wilfried Kunde, David Dignath

2020Psychonomic Bulletin & Review21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Body representations are readily expanded based on sensorimotor experience. A dynamic view of body representations, however, holds that these representations cannot only be expanded but that they can also be narrowed down by disembodying elements of the body representation that are no longer warranted. Here we induced illusory ownership in terms of a moving rubber hand illusion and studied the maintenance of this illusion across different conditions. We observed ownership experience to decrease gradually unless participants continued to receive confirmatory multisensory input. Moreover, a single instance of multisensory mismatch - a hammer striking the rubber hand but not the real hand - triggered substantial and immediate disembodiment. Together, these findings support and extend previous theoretical efforts to model body representations through basic mechanisms of multisensory integration. They further support an updating model suggesting that embodied entities fade from the body representation if they are not refreshed continuously.

Topics & Concepts

IllusionEmbodied cognitionPsychologyMultisensory integrationCognitive psychologyRepresentation (politics)Sensory systemBody schemaHammerCrossmodalCommunicationPerceptionComputer scienceVisual perceptionArtificial intelligenceNeuroscienceStructural engineeringPolitical sciencePoliticsLawEngineeringVirtual Reality Applications and ImpactsAction Observation and SynchronizationTactile and Sensory Interactions
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