“…Thus, more broadly, our results advance our understanding of the multisensory processes that support the perception of one’s own body, as they serve as the first conclusive empirical demonstration of BCI in a bodily illusion. Such successful modeling of the multisensory information processing in body ownership is relevant for future computational work into bodily illusions and bodily self-awareness, for example, more extended frameworks that also include contributions of interoception ( Azzalini et al, 2019 ; Park and Blanke, 2019 ), motor processes ( Burin et al, 2015 ; Burin et al, 2017 ), pre-existing stored representations about what kind of objects that may or may not be part of one’s body ( Tsakiris et al, 2010 ), expectations ( Chancel et al, 2021 ; Guterstam et al, 2019b Ferri et al, 2013 ), and high-level cognition ( Lush et al, 2020 ; Slater and Ehrsson, 2022 ). Future quantitative computational studies like the present one are needed to formally compare these different theories of body ownership and advance the corresponding theoretical framework.…”