| Literature DB >> 27648214 |
Roger Newport1, Kelly Auty2, Mark Carey1, Katie Greenfield1, Ellen M Howard1, Natasha Ratcliffe1, Hayley Thair1, Kristy Themelis1.
Abstract
If British teenage boy asks you to pull his finger, it is usually an indication that he simultaneously wishes to break wind. If you were to tell him that you could pull his finger and stretch it to twice its length, you might expect a similarly irreverent response yet when we pulled the fingers of nearly 600 children and adolescents, 93% reported the illusion of stretching. Grossly distorted body representations need not be the preserve of clinical disorders and can reliably be induced in healthy participants across all ages.Entities:
Keywords: MIRAGE; children; finger stretching; multisensory illusion; not rubber hand illusion
Year: 2015 PMID: 27648214 PMCID: PMC5016819 DOI: 10.1177/2041669515599310
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Iperception ISSN: 2041-6695
Figure 1.Upon placing his or her hand inside MIRAGE (upper left), each participant was instructed to make a fist and extend the index finger as if pointing at the experimenter (although it is rude to point, it was excused on this occasion). The experimenter placed a wooden block against the fingertip and asked whether the participant could feel it. The block was immediately positioned further away with the words, “But when I move it back here you cannot touch it without moving your hand, can you?” Once agreement had been obtained, the experimenter grasped the distal phalanx (end) of the index finger and gently pulled; firm enough to straighten the collateral ligaments of the finger, but not enough to cause discomfort. Simultaneously, the portion of the live video corresponding to the proximal interphalangeal joint (middle or second knuckle) expanded in such a way that the visible area gradually doubled outwards until it reached the extreme ends of the finger (see Supplemental Video http://www.psychology.nottingham.ac.uk/staff/rwn/Giveitatugsupplementalvideo.mp4). After the stretch, which took 1 to 3 seconds depending upon actual finger length, the experimenter reproduced the wooden block and again touched it against the fingertip with the words, “But now you can!” At this point, the experimenter posed the question, “Does it feel like your finger has really stretched?” to which the participant responded “yes” or “no.”
Figure 2.Illusions induced for each age group by gender (females: circles; males: diamonds).