Abstract

The sense of body ownership, the feeling that one’s own body belongs to oneself, is generated from the integration of visual, tactile, and proprioceptive information. However, long-term non-use of parts of the body due to physical dysfunction caused by trauma or illness may disturb multisensory integration, resulting in a decreased sense of body ownership. The rubber hand illusion (RHI) is an experimental method of manipulating the sense of ownership (SoO). In this illusion, subjects feel as if the rubber hand in front of them were their own hand. The RHI elicits the disownership phenomenon; not only does the rubber hand feels like one’s own hand, but one’s own hand does not feel like one’s own hand. The decrease of ownership of one’s own body induced by the bodily illusion is accompanied by neurophysiological changes, such as attenuation of somatosensory evoked potential and decreases in skin temperature. If the loss of the SoO is associated with decreased neurophysiological function, the dysfunction of patients complaining of the loss of ownership can be exacerbated; appropriate rehabilitation prescriptions are urgently required. The present study attempted to induce a sense of disownership of subjects’ own hands using the RHI and investigated whether the tactile sensitivity threshold was altered by disownership. Via questionnaire, subjects reported a decrease of ownership after the RHI manipulation; at the same time, tactile sensitivity thresholds were shown to increase in tactile evaluation using the Semmes-Weinstein monofilaments test. The tactile detection rate changes before and after the RHI were negatively correlated with the disownership-score changes. These results show that subjects’ sense of disownership, that their own hands did not belong to them, led to decreases in tactile sensitivity. The study findings also suggest that manipulating of illusory ownership can be a tool for estimating the degree of exacerbation of sensory impairment in patients. Consideration of new interventions that optimize the sense of body ownership may contribute to new rehabilitation strategies for post-stroke sensory impairment.

Highlights

  • Sense of ownership (SoO) is the feeling that parts of the body, or the entire body, belong to oneself (Gallagher, 2000)

  • This study suggested that the parietal lobe plays a significant role in the detection of visuo-tactile conflicts from each modality and modulating activity in the frontal network. These findings suggest the following three effects associated with disownership of one’s own body under the illusion, (1) multisensory integration effects, (2) attentional modulation effects (Ortigue et al, 2006), and (3) functional deafferentation in the physical body

  • The evaluation of tactile sensitivity in this study revealed a slight change in illusory ownership under asynchronous conditions

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Summary

Introduction

Sense of ownership (SoO) is the feeling that parts of the body, or the entire body, belong to oneself (Gallagher, 2000) This subjective experience is generated from multisensory integration of visual, proprioceptive, and somatosensory information through comparisons between the visually perceived body and the anatomical model of the bodily self (Gallagher, 2000; Jeannerod, 2003; Ehrsson et al, 2004; Tsakiris, 2010). When one’s own hand is observed in the appropriate position, as part of one’s body, and can be moved according to one’s own will, the hand can be clearly recognized as part of one’s own body This conscious experience is crucial to the proper perception of information from the surroundings and to the corresponding adaptive movement. Asomatognosia (unawareness of or ignoring parts or sides of the body), and somatoparaphrenia (a syndrome that includes unawareness of ownership of body parts, delusional misidentification, and anthropomorphism) due to stroke are known to cause symptoms such as loss of body ownership and attribution of the limb to another person (Feinberg and Venneri, 2014; Romano and Maravita, 2019)

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