Abstract

There is a growing consensus that our most fundamental sense of self is structured by the ongoing integration of sensory and motor information related to our own body. Depersonalisation (DP) is an intriguing form of altered subjective experience in which people report feelings of unreality and detachment from their sense of self. The current study used the visual remapping of touch (VRT) paradigm to explore self-bias in visual-tactile integration in non-clinical participants reporting high and low levels of depersonalisation experiences. We found that the high-DP group showed an increased overall VRT effect but a no-self-face bias, instead showing a greater VRT effect when observing the face of another person. In addition, across all participants, self-bias was negatively predicted by the occurrence of anomalous body experiences. These results indicate disrupted integration of tactile and visual representations of the bodily self in those experiencing high levels of DP and provide greater understanding of how disruptions in multisensory perception of the self may underlie the phenomenology of depersonalisation.

Highlights

  • The sense of self lies at the heart of conscious experience, anchoring our disparate perceptions, emotions, thoughts and actions into a unitary whole (Bermúdez, 2002; Metzinger, 2009; Zahavi, 2005)

  • In order to investigate whether the high- and low-DP groups differed in the amount of visual remapping of touch (VRT) in response to self and other faces, a three-way mixed analysis of variance (ANOVA) was used to test for interaction effects between image type, finger trajectory and DP group on accuracy in perceiving bilateral tactile stimulation when viewing bilateral finger trajectories

  • The ANOVA revealed a significant effect of finger trajectory, F(1,38) = 14.99, p < 0.001 ηp2 = 0.283 because participants were more accurate in touch compared to no-touch trials

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Summary

Introduction

The sense of self lies at the heart of conscious experience, anchoring our disparate perceptions, emotions, thoughts and actions into a unitary whole (Bermúdez, 2002; Metzinger, 2009; Zahavi, 2005). Viewing touch on another person’s body activates brain regions that are typically recruited when perceiving touch on one’s own body (Blakemore et al, 2005; Ebisch et al, 2008; Keysers and Gazzola, 2009). These findings suggest the existence of a tactile mirror system analogous to the motor and emotional mirror systems, which have been hypothesised to play a key role in understanding others (Gallese, 2007)

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