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Are Movements Necessary for the Sense of Body Ownership? Evidence from the Rubber Hand Illusion in Pure Hemiplegic Patients

A question still debated within cognitive neuroscience is whether signals present during actions significantly contribute to the emergence of human’s body ownership. In the present study, we aimed at answer this question by means of a neuropsychological approach. We administered the classical rubber...

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Autores principales: Burin, Dalila, Livelli, Alessandro, Garbarini, Francesca, Fossataro, Carlotta, Folegatti, Alessia, Gindri, Patrizia, Pia, Lorenzo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4361688/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25775041
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0117155
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author Burin, Dalila
Livelli, Alessandro
Garbarini, Francesca
Fossataro, Carlotta
Folegatti, Alessia
Gindri, Patrizia
Pia, Lorenzo
author_facet Burin, Dalila
Livelli, Alessandro
Garbarini, Francesca
Fossataro, Carlotta
Folegatti, Alessia
Gindri, Patrizia
Pia, Lorenzo
author_sort Burin, Dalila
collection PubMed
description A question still debated within cognitive neuroscience is whether signals present during actions significantly contribute to the emergence of human’s body ownership. In the present study, we aimed at answer this question by means of a neuropsychological approach. We administered the classical rubber hand illusion paradigm to a group of healthy participants and to a group of neurological patients affected by a complete left upper limb hemiplegia, but without any propriceptive/tactile deficits. The illusion strength was measured both subjectively (i.e., by a self-report questionnaire) and behaviorally (i.e., the location of one’s own hand is shifted towards the rubber hand). We aimed at examining whether, and to which extent, an enduring absence of movements related signals affects body ownership. Our results showed that patients displayed, respect to healthy participants, stronger illusory effects when the left (affected) hand was stimulated and no effects when the right (unaffected) hand was stimulated. In other words, hemiplegics had a weaker/more flexible sense of body ownership for the affected hand, but an enhanced/more rigid one for the healthy hand. Possible interpretations of such asymmetrical distribution of body ownership, as well as limits of our results, are discussed. Broadly speaking, our findings suggest that the alteration of the normal flow of signals present during movements impacts on human’s body ownership. This in turn, means that movements have a role per se in developing and maintaining a coherent body ownership.
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spelling pubmed-43616882015-03-23 Are Movements Necessary for the Sense of Body Ownership? Evidence from the Rubber Hand Illusion in Pure Hemiplegic Patients Burin, Dalila Livelli, Alessandro Garbarini, Francesca Fossataro, Carlotta Folegatti, Alessia Gindri, Patrizia Pia, Lorenzo PLoS One Research Article A question still debated within cognitive neuroscience is whether signals present during actions significantly contribute to the emergence of human’s body ownership. In the present study, we aimed at answer this question by means of a neuropsychological approach. We administered the classical rubber hand illusion paradigm to a group of healthy participants and to a group of neurological patients affected by a complete left upper limb hemiplegia, but without any propriceptive/tactile deficits. The illusion strength was measured both subjectively (i.e., by a self-report questionnaire) and behaviorally (i.e., the location of one’s own hand is shifted towards the rubber hand). We aimed at examining whether, and to which extent, an enduring absence of movements related signals affects body ownership. Our results showed that patients displayed, respect to healthy participants, stronger illusory effects when the left (affected) hand was stimulated and no effects when the right (unaffected) hand was stimulated. In other words, hemiplegics had a weaker/more flexible sense of body ownership for the affected hand, but an enhanced/more rigid one for the healthy hand. Possible interpretations of such asymmetrical distribution of body ownership, as well as limits of our results, are discussed. Broadly speaking, our findings suggest that the alteration of the normal flow of signals present during movements impacts on human’s body ownership. This in turn, means that movements have a role per se in developing and maintaining a coherent body ownership. Public Library of Science 2015-03-16 /pmc/articles/PMC4361688/ /pubmed/25775041 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0117155 Text en © 2015 Burin et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Burin, Dalila
Livelli, Alessandro
Garbarini, Francesca
Fossataro, Carlotta
Folegatti, Alessia
Gindri, Patrizia
Pia, Lorenzo
Are Movements Necessary for the Sense of Body Ownership? Evidence from the Rubber Hand Illusion in Pure Hemiplegic Patients
title Are Movements Necessary for the Sense of Body Ownership? Evidence from the Rubber Hand Illusion in Pure Hemiplegic Patients
title_full Are Movements Necessary for the Sense of Body Ownership? Evidence from the Rubber Hand Illusion in Pure Hemiplegic Patients
title_fullStr Are Movements Necessary for the Sense of Body Ownership? Evidence from the Rubber Hand Illusion in Pure Hemiplegic Patients
title_full_unstemmed Are Movements Necessary for the Sense of Body Ownership? Evidence from the Rubber Hand Illusion in Pure Hemiplegic Patients
title_short Are Movements Necessary for the Sense of Body Ownership? Evidence from the Rubber Hand Illusion in Pure Hemiplegic Patients
title_sort are movements necessary for the sense of body ownership? evidence from the rubber hand illusion in pure hemiplegic patients
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4361688/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25775041
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0117155
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