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First Person Experience of Body Transfer in Virtual Reality

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  • Mel Slater
  • Bernhard Spanlang
  • Maria V Sanchez-Vives
  • Olaf Blanke

Abstract

Background: Altering the normal association between touch and its visual correlate can result in the illusory perception of a fake limb as part of our own body. Thus, when touch is seen to be applied to a rubber hand while felt synchronously on the corresponding hidden real hand, an illusion of ownership of the rubber hand usually occurs. The illusion has also been demonstrated using visuomotor correlation between the movements of the hidden real hand and the seen fake hand. This type of paradigm has been used with respect to the whole body generating out-of-the-body and body substitution illusions. However, such studies have only ever manipulated a single factor and although they used a form of virtual reality have not exploited the power of immersive virtual reality (IVR) to produce radical transformations in body ownership. Principal Findings: Here we show that a first person perspective of a life-sized virtual human female body that appears to substitute the male subjects' own bodies was sufficient to generate a body transfer illusion. This was demonstrated subjectively by questionnaire and physiologically through heart-rate deceleration in response to a threat to the virtual body. This finding is in contrast to earlier experimental studies that assume visuotactile synchrony to be the critical contributory factor in ownership illusions. Our finding was possible because IVR allowed us to use a novel experimental design for this type of problem with three independent binary factors: (i) perspective position (first or third), (ii) synchronous or asynchronous mirror reflections and (iii) synchrony or asynchrony between felt and seen touch. Conclusions: The results support the notion that bottom-up perceptual mechanisms can temporarily override top down knowledge resulting in a radical illusion of transfer of body ownership. The research also illustrates immersive virtual reality as a powerful tool in the study of body representation and experience, since it supports experimental manipulations that would otherwise be infeasible, with the technology being mature enough to represent human bodies and their motion.

Suggested Citation

  • Mel Slater & Bernhard Spanlang & Maria V Sanchez-Vives & Olaf Blanke, 2010. "First Person Experience of Body Transfer in Virtual Reality," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 5(5), pages 1-9, May.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0010564
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0010564
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Jarque, Carlos M. & Bera, Anil K., 1980. "Efficient tests for normality, homoscedasticity and serial independence of regression residuals," Economics Letters, Elsevier, vol. 6(3), pages 255-259.
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    Cited by:

    1. Konstantina Kilteni & Jean-Marie Normand & Maria V Sanchez-Vives & Mel Slater, 2012. "Extending Body Space in Immersive Virtual Reality: A Very Long Arm Illusion," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 7(7), pages 1-15, July.
    2. Catherine Preston & H Henrik Ehrsson, 2014. "Illusory Changes in Body Size Modulate Body Satisfaction in a Way That Is Related to Non-Clinical Eating Disorder Psychopathology," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 9(1), pages 1-9, January.
    3. Henrique Galvan Debarba & Sidney Bovet & Roy Salomon & Olaf Blanke & Bruno Herbelin & Ronan Boulic, 2017. "Characterizing first and third person viewpoints and their alternation for embodied interaction in virtual reality," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 12(12), pages 1-19, December.

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