Abstract

Passively grasping an unseen artificial finger induces ownership over this finger and an illusory coming together of one’s index fingers: a grasp illusion. Here we determine how interoceptive ability and attending to the upper limbs influence this illusion. Participants passively grasped an unseen artificial finger with their left index finger and thumb for 3 min while their right index finger, located 12 cm below, was lightly clamped. Experiment 1 (n = 30) investigated whether the strength of the grasp illusion (perceived index finger spacing and perceived ownership) is related to a person’s level of interoceptive accuracy (modified heartbeat counting task) and sensibility (Noticing subscale of the Multidimensional Assessment of Interoceptive Awareness). Experiment 2 (n = 30) investigated the effect of providing verbal or tactile cues to guide participants’ attention to their upper limbs. On their own, neither interoceptive accuracy and sensibility or verbal and tactile cueing had an effect on the grasp illusion. However, verbal cueing increased the strength of the grasp illusion in individuals with lower interoceptive ability. Across the observed range of interoceptive accuracy and sensibility, verbal cueing decreased perceived index spacing by 5.6 cm [1.91 to 9.38] (mean [95%CI]), and perceived ownership by ∼3 points on a 7-point Likert scale (slope -0.93 [-1.72 to -0.15]). Thus, attending to the upper limbs via verbal cues increases the strength of the grasp illusion in a way that is inversely proportional to a person’s level of interoceptive accuracy and sensibility.

Highlights

  • Proprioception and the brain’s representation of the body are crucial to move autonomously and to interact with the world [1, 2]

  • Given that interoceptive accuracy and interoceptive sensibility are not strongly correlated with one another and likely distinct aspects of interoception [23, 31,32,33,34], we thought it important to assess both as we investigated factors that may influence the strength of the grasp illusion

  • We investigated whether individual differences in interoceptive accuracy and interoceptive sensibility were related to the strength of the grasp illusion

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Summary

Introduction

Proprioception and the brain’s representation of the body are crucial to move autonomously and to interact with the world [1, 2] Related to this is the sense of body ownership, the feeling that our body and its parts belong to us. Various illusions have been used to investigate the neurophysiological and cognitive processes that underpin body ownership, most famous of which is the rubber hand illusion [3]. Thought to require congruent, ongoing, multisensory stimuli [4], we devised two novel illusions —the rubber finger illusion [5] and the grasp illusion [5, 6]— to demonstrate these bodily illusions of ownership can be induced by congruent, ongoing or static stimuli that activate a single class of sensory receptors, namely cutaneous receptors or muscle spindles

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