The Rubber Hand Illusion Revisited: Visuotactile Integration and Self-Attribution.
Indexed incrossrefpubmed
Abstract
Watching a rubber hand being stroked, while one's own unseen hand is synchronously stroked, may cause the rubber hand to be attributed to one's own body, to "feel like it's my hand." A behavioral measure of the rubber hand illusion (RHI) is a drift of the perceived position of one's own hand toward the rubber hand. The authors investigated (a) the influence of general body scheme representations on the RHI in Experiments 1 and 2 and (b) the necessary conditions of visuotactile stimulation underlying the RHI in Experiments 3 and 4. Overall, the results suggest that at the level of the process underlying the build up of the RHI, bottom-up processes of visuotactile correlation drive the illusion as a necessary,…
Citation impact
1,336
total citations
- FWCI
- 24.63
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 38
Citations per year
Authors
2Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Illusion
- Natural rubber
- Psychology
- Cognitive psychology
- Computer vision
- Social psychology
- Computer science
- Materials science
No related works found for this paper.