Tuesday, December 09, 2008

Scientists produce illusion of body-swapping

Dec. 2, 2008
Courtesy Karolinska Institute
and World Science staff
Cog­ni­tive neu­ro­sci­en­tists at the Swed­ish med­i­cal uni­ver­s­ity Karolin­ska In­sti­tute say they have made peo­ple per­ceive the bod­ies of man­nequins and oth­er peo­ple as their own. The find­ings are to ap­pear Dec. 3 in the on­line re­search jour­nal PLoS One.

"This shows how easy it is to change the brain's per­cep­tion of the phys­i­cal self," said the in­sti­tute's Hen­rik Ehrs­son, who led the proj­ect. "By ma­ni­pu­lat­ing sen­so­ry im­pres­sions, it's pos­si­ble to fool the self not only out of its body but in­to oth­er bod­ies too."

The re­search was aimed at learn­ing more about how the brain con­structs an in­ter­nal im­age of the body. Ma­ni­pu­lation of bodily iden­ti­fica­t­ion and self-per­cep­tion may be use­ful in vir­tu­al real­ity ap­plica­t­ions and ro­bot tech­nol­o­gy, ac­cord­ing to the re­search­ers.

In a first ex­pe­ri­ment, they fit­ted the head of a shop dum­my with two cam­er­as con­nect­ed to two small screens placed in front of the sub­jects' eyes, so that they saw what the dum­my "saw." When the dum­my's cam­era eyes and a sub­jec­t's head were di­rect­ed down­wards, the sub­ject saw the dum­my's body where he or she would nor­mally have seen his or her own.

The bod­y-swapping il­lu­sion arose, investigators said, when a sci­ent­ist touched the stom­ach of both with two sticks. The sub­ject could then see that the man­nequin's stom­ach was be­ing touched while feel­ing, but not see­ing, a si­m­i­lar sensa­t­ion on his or her own stom­ach. As a re­sult, the sub­ject de­vel­oped a pow­er­ful sensa­t­ion that the man­nequin's body was his or her own, re­search­ers said.

In anoth­er ex­pe­ri­ment, the cam­era was mount­ed on­to anoth­er per­son's head. When this per­son and the sub­ject turned to­wards each oth­er to shake hands, the sub­ject per­ceived the cam­er­a-wear­er's body as his or her own.

"The sub­jects see them­selves shak­ing hands from the out­side, but ex­perience it as anoth­er per­son," said Va­le­ria Petkova, who con­ducted the study with Ehrs­son. "The sen­so­ry im­pres­sion from the hand-shake is per­ceived as though com­ing from the new body, rath­er than the sub­jec­t's own."

The strength of the il­lu­sion was con­firmed by the sub­jects' ex­hibit­ing stress re­ac­tions when a knife was held to the cam­era wear­er's arm but not when it was held to their own, in­ves­ti­ga­tors said. The il­lu­sion al­so worked even when the two peo­ple dif­fered in ap­pearance or were of dif­fer­ent sexes. How­ev­er, it was­n't pos­si­ble to fool people in­to iden­ti­fy­ing with a non-humanoid ob­ject, such as a chair or a large block, the re­search­ers not­ed