Abstract

Tactile feedback plays a key role in the attribution of a limb to the self and in the motor control of grasping and manipulation. However, due to technological limits, current prosthetic hands do not provide amputees with cutaneous touch feedback. Recent findings showed that amputees can be tricked into experiencing an alien rubber hand as part of their own body, by applying synchronous touches to the stump which is out of view, and to the rubber hand in full view. It was suggested that similar effects could be achieved by using a prosthesis with touch sensors that provides synchronous cutaneous feedback through an array of tactile stimulators on the stump. Such a prosthesis holds the potential to be easily incorporated within one’s body scheme, because it would reproduce the perceptual illusion in everyday usage. We propose to use sensory substitution – specifically vibrotactile – to address this issue, as current haptic technology is still too bulky and inefficient. In this basic study we addressed the fundamental question of whether visuo-tactile modality mismatch promotes self-attribution of a limb, and to what extent compared to a modality-matched paradigm, on normally-limbed subjects. We manipulated visuo-tactile stimulations, comprising combinations of modality matched, modality mismatched, synchronous and asynchronous stimulations, in a set of experiments fashioned after the Rubber Hand Illusion. Modality mismatched stimulation was provided using a keypad-controlled vibrotactile display. Results from three independent measures of embodiment (questionnaires, pointing tests and skin conductance responses) indicate that vibrotactile sensory substitution can be used to induce self-attribution of a rubber hand when synchronous but modality-conflicting visuo-tactile stimulation is delivered to the biological finger pads and to the equivalent rubber hand phalanges.

Highlights

  • The sense of body ownership refers to the particular perceptual status that identifies part of the body as self

  • In agreement with previous studies [1], [5], [11], [17], [21], after the classical Rubber Hand Illusion (RHI) condition (SCB) participants provided stronger ratings for the three illusion statements than for the six control statements (Wilcoxon signed rank test; p,0.001), indicating that they were not suggestible; in addition the ratings from the illusion statements were greater in the Synchronous Congruent Brushstroke (SCB) than in the Asynchronous Congruent Brushstroke (ACB) condition

  • Across the Three Measures The data from the three experiments were combined for analysis using a 2 way ANOVA [factors: stimulation conditions (SCB, Synchronous Incongruent Brushstroke (SIB), ACB, Synchronous Congruent Tapping (SCT), Synchronous Incongruent Tapping (SIT) and Asynchronous Congruent Tapping (ACT)) and the three measurements] as suggested by the work by Ehrsson et al [6]

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Summary

Introduction

The sense of body ownership refers to the particular perceptual status that identifies part of the body as self. Such self-attribution is mediated by multi-sensory perceptual correlations [1,2,3]; e.g. the attribution of a visible hand to the self depends on a match between the afferent somatic signals and visual feedback from the hand. It was shown that after synchronous visuo-tactile stimulations, the perceived location of the participant’s hand shifted towards the rubber hand This illusion does not occur when the rubber hand and the participant’s own hand are stroked asynchronously (i.e. when temporal delays are longer than 300 ms, as reported by [4]). Ehrsson and colleagues, measured the neural counterpart of this RHI by means of fMRI and demonstrated that the feeling of hand ownership is reflected in neural activity in the premotor cortex, suggesting that self-identification of the alien hand as a part of own body results from a multisensory integration in parieto– cerebellar regions and a recalibration of proprioceptive representations within the peripersonal space (i.e., the spatial area within reach of limbs of an individual) [5]

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