2012
DOI: 10.1016/j.actpsy.2012.07.016
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Individual differences in the rubber-hand illusion: Predicting self-reports of people's personal experiences

Abstract: Can we assess individual differences in the extent to which a person perceives the rubber-hand illusion on the basis of self-reported experiences? In this research, we develop such an instrument using Rasch-type models. In our conception, incorporating an object (e.g., a rubber hand) into one's body image requires various sensorimotor and cognitive processes. The extent to which people can meet these requirements thus determines how intensely people experience and, simultaneously, describe the illusion. As a c… Show more

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Cited by 61 publications
(57 citation statements)
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References 27 publications
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“…These ask questions such as ‘To what extent did you have a sense that you were in the same place as person X?’ and ‘To what extend did you have a sense of being part of the group?’ Individual differences in response could be caused by differences in personality, in multisensory integration (Haans, Kaiser, Bouwhuis, & IJsselsteijn, 2012), in prior experience of gaming/VR, or other factors. Further research will be needed to define these fully.…”
Section: The Munros – Challenges In the Implementation Of Vrmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These ask questions such as ‘To what extent did you have a sense that you were in the same place as person X?’ and ‘To what extend did you have a sense of being part of the group?’ Individual differences in response could be caused by differences in personality, in multisensory integration (Haans, Kaiser, Bouwhuis, & IJsselsteijn, 2012), in prior experience of gaming/VR, or other factors. Further research will be needed to define these fully.…”
Section: The Munros – Challenges In the Implementation Of Vrmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The authors argue that this top-down modulation may perhaps be countered by increasing the richness of the multisensory stimulation, which in their experiment involved not just establishing visuotactile contingencies, but visuomotor, and tactilemotor contingencies as well. Recent evidence on the rubber-hand illusion supports this claim by demonstrating that increasing the amount of information in the visuotactile stimulation (e.g., tapping versus stroking the fingers) makes it easier for people to experience the illusion (Haans, Kaiser, Bouwhuis, & IJsselsteijn, 2012).…”
Section: Body Transfer and Body Ownershipmentioning
confidence: 65%
“…Ők sokkal inkább építettek a látásból érkező információkra (itt a B feldolgozási folyamatok vannak túlsúlyban). Ebből fontos látnunk, hogy ha az egyik információfeldolgozás túlsúlyba kerül, akkor gátolja a másik működését [33].…”
Section: Azonosság éS Rugalmasság -A Testképre Vonatkozó Set-shiftingunclassified