| Literature DB >> 20011144 |
Mel Slater1, Daniel Perez-Marcos, H Henrik Ehrsson, Maria V Sanchez-Vives.
Abstract
We discuss three experiments that investigate how virtual limbs and bodies can come to feel like real limbs and bodies. The first experiment shows that an illusion of ownership of a virtual arm appearing to project out of a person's shoulder can be produced by tactile stimulation on a person's hidden real hand and synchronous stimulation on the seen virtual hand. The second shows that the illusion can be produced by synchronous movement of the person's hidden real hand and a virtual hand. The third shows that a weaker form of the illusion can be produced when a brain-computer interface is employed to move the virtual hand by means of motor imagery without any tactile stimulation. We discuss related studies that indicate that the ownership illusion may be generated for an entire body. This has important implications for the scientific understanding of body ownership and several practical applications.Entities:
Keywords: body ownership; presence; rubber hand illusion; virtual reality
Year: 2009 PMID: 20011144 PMCID: PMC2751618 DOI: 10.3389/neuro.01.029.2009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
Figure 1Four experiments on the virtual arm illusion. (A) Visual–tactile correlations – the experimenter touches the real hand with a wand and the participant sees the virtual ball touch the virtual hand. (B) Visual, motor and proprioceptive correlations – the participant wears a data glove and moves his fingers and hand and the virtual hand moves. (C) Adding shadows for the ball and arm. (D) Using a brain–computer interface with cued motor imagery – the arrows point to the left or the right as cues for the motor imagery.
Figure 2Looking down at your virtual body. A seated participant wears a head-mounted display, and looks down to see a virtual body in place of his real one.