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Symposia > LongoOn the perception of the body from within and from the outsideChairs: Matthew R. Longo1 & Manos Tsakiris2 1 Department of Psychological Sciences, Birkbeck, University of London, UK2 Department of Psychology, Royal Holloway, University of London, UK, Abstract: Symposium Abstract: We have uniquely intimate knowledge of our own body, as the seat of somatic sensations and the constituent of our sense of self. In this sense, we perceive our body ‘from within’, as the origin of first-person experience. We also, however, perceive the body ‘from the outside’ as a conspicuous and ever-present object in our perceptual field, and as a reference frame for our representation of the external world and our interactions with it. This fundamental versatility of the body has been reflected by largely distinct research literatures on ‘interoception’, ’body representations’ and ‘body image’. Recent research has begun to investigate connections between these facets of embodiment revealing increasingly fundamental links between our intrinsically private experience of our body from inside and our essentially public body as an object in the physical world. This symposium will showcase these recent advances by starting from the neurocognitive understanding of the experience of embodiment and moving on to the mental representation of the physicality of the body, bringing together leading researchers in the field from across Europe. While addressing a broad range of issues, the talks in the symposium share a common focus on understanding the reciprocal connections between the body perceived from within and from the outside. Talk 1:Multisensory Mechanisms of Owning an Entire Artificial BodyHenrik Ehrsson Department of Neuroscience, Karolinska Institute, Sweden When we look down at our body we immediately experience that it belongs to us. We do not experience our body as a set of fragmented parts, but rather as a single entity. How does this perception of owning an entire body arise? Here we address this question by using a ‘body-swap’ illusion where people experience an artificial body as their own body, in combination with brain imaging and behavioral experiments. Our behavioral and psychophysiological results suggest that the following factors are necessary for the elicitation of the illusion: i) temporal congruency of visual and tactile signals; ii) spatial congruency of visual and tactile signals in an external reference frame centered on the body; iii) a humanoid body shape; (iv) a first person visual perspective. Importantly, we further describe how ownership generalizes from the stimulated body part to the rest of the (unstimulated) body. Our functional magnetic resonance imaging studies revealed a tight coupling between the experience of full-body ownership and neural responses in bilateral ventral premotor and left intraparietal cortices and the left putamen. Importantly, activity in the ventral premotor cortex reflected the construction of ownership of a whole body from the parts as it was present irrespectively of which body part that was stimulated to trigger the illusion, and further, this area displayed multivoxel patterns carrying information about full-body ownership. Taken together these results provide a mechanistic multisensory framework to explain how we come to experience an entire body as our own. Talk 2:Just a heartbeat away from one’s body: interoceptive sensitivity and malleability of body-representationsManos Tsakiris Psychology, Royal Holloway, University of London, UK Body-awareness relies on the representation of both interoceptive and exteroceptive percepts coming from one’s body. However, the exact relationship and possible interaction of interoceptive and exteroceptive systems for body-awareness remain unknown. Based on recent models of self-awareness that consider the insula as a convergence zone linked to the representation of the bodily self, we examined the interaction between interoceptive and exteroceptive awareness of the body. Across three experiments, we combined measures of interoceptive sensitivity with experimental manipulations of body representations. Consistent results suggests that interoceptive sensitivity predicts the malleability of body representations, that is, people with low interoceptive sensitivity experience stronger illusions of embodiment (“rubber hand illusion”) and identification (“enfacement illusion”). In one final experiment, we manipulated interoceptive sensitivity by mirror self-observation. Overall these findings suggest that interoceptive sensitivity modulates the integration of multisensory information and predicts the strength and malleability of body-representations. Talk 3:How changes in structure and function of the physical body affect bodyand space representation. Andrea Serino University of Bologna, Italy. The brain contains multiple representations of the body and of the space surrounding the body, i.e. peripersonal space (PPS). We asked how much such representations are sensitive to changes in the structure and the function of the body they represent. In order to test the effects of a change in the structure of the physical body, we tested body and PPS representations in patients undergone to upper limb amputation and prostheses implantation. Amputation deformed body and PPS representation, so that patients perceived their stump as shorter and the PPS around the stump was disorganized, as compared to the intact limb. These effects can be partially reversed by prosthesis implantation, as just wearing the prosthesis extended the perceived length of the amputated limb and the representation of the space around it. In a second study, in order to test the effects of a change in the function of the physical body, we tested body and PPS representation before and after 10 hours of immobilization of the right arm, resulting in a parallel extraordinary use of the left arm. This procedure did not change the implicitly perceived length of the immobilized right arm, but did increase the perceived length of the over-used left arm. Conversely, PPS representation was reduced around the immobilized arm, but did not change around the over-used arm. These findings show that body and space representations are plastically shaped as a function of both structural and functional proprieties of the physical body. Talk 4:A Hierarchy of Body RepresentationsMatthew R. Longo Department of Psychological Sciences, Birkbeck, University of London, UK We experience our body as a coherent, 3-D, volumetric object. Initial somatotopic maps in somatosensory cortex, however, represent the body as a set of fragmented, 2-D skin surfaces. I will discuss a series of recent experiments investigating different classes of body representation of the hand, which suggest they fall along a continuum from fragmented 2-D maps of individual skin surfaces to coherent 3-D maps of the body as a whole. First, tactile localisation on the skin appears to rely on a purely 2-D representation of skin surfaces. Localisation biases, though consistent from person-to- person, differ qualitatively between the palm and the dorsum. Second, body representations underlying position sense appear to rely on an intermediate representation. Distortions of hand shape are qualitatively similar between the palm and dorsum, suggesting that they do not rely on fully distinct 2-D representations of each surface. However, the magnitude of distortions is reduced on the palm, inconsistent with a representation of the hand as a fully 3-D object. Position sense may rely on a 2.5-D representation of the body, analogous to the 2.5-D sketch proposed in vision by David Marr. Finally, the conscious body image appears to be largely undistorted, with a clear match between the palm and dorsum, suggesting they rely on a fully-integrated 3-D representation of the hand as a volumetric object. Together, these findings reveal a hierarchy of body representations effecting a coordinate transformation from fragmented 2-D maps in somatosensory cortex to a volumetric representation of our body in the world. Talk 5:The Perception of Spatial Layout as a Biologically Functional AdaptationSally Linkenauger Human Perception, Cognition, and Action group, Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics, Germany From a biological perspective, visual and perceptual systems evolved to promote adaptive actions with minimal energetic cost. As a result, humans are only sensitive to the visual information which is necessary for successful environment interaction. Additionally, individuals perceive this information in an adaptive way which supports successful behaviors. Information specifying the spatial layout not only allows for the execution of visually controlled actions, but also allows perceivers to determine which actions they can perform. In order to make decisions about possibilities for action, visual information specifying the environment needs to be scaled to action capabilities of actors’ bodies. I will provide evidence that this rescaling provides the metric to which the optical information specifying perceived sizes and distances are scaled. In other words, individuals perceive sizes and distances as a proportion of the action-relevant aspect of their body. Hence, individuals do not perceive the world, but the relationship between their body’s action capabilities and the environment. |
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