Banakou Domna, Slater Mel
Experimental Virtual Environments for Neuroscience and Technology Laboratory, Department of Personality, Evaluation, and Psychological Treatment, Faculty of Psychology, and Institute for Brain, Cognition, and Behaviour, University of Barcelona, 08035 Barcelona, Spain;
Experimental Virtual Environments for Neuroscience and Technology Laboratory, Department of Personality, Evaluation, and Psychological Treatment, Faculty of Psychology, and Institute for Brain, Cognition, and Behaviour, University of Barcelona, 08035 Barcelona, Spain; Institució Catalana de Recerca i Estudis Avançats, 08010 Barcelona, Spain; and Department of Computer Science, University College London, London WC1E 6BT, United Kingdom
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2014 Dec 9;111(49):17678-83. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1414936111. Epub 2014 Nov 24.
When we carry out an act, we typically attribute the action to ourselves, the sense of agency. Explanations for agency include conscious prior intention to act, followed by observation of the sensory consequences; brain activity that involves the feed-forward prediction of the consequences combined with rapid inverse motor prediction to fine-tune the action in real time; priming where there is, e.g., a prior command to perform the act; a cause (the intention to act) preceding the effect (the results of the action); and common-sense rules of attribution of physical causality satisfied. We describe an experiment where participants falsely attributed an act to themselves under conditions that apparently cannot be explained by these theories. A life-sized virtual body (VB) seen from the first-person perspective in 3D stereo, as if substituting the real body, was used to induce the illusion of ownership over the VB. Half of the 44 experimental participants experienced VB movements that were synchronous with their own movements (sync), and the other half asynchronous (async). The VB, seen in a mirror, spoke with corresponding lip movements, and for half of the participants this was accompanied by synchronous vibrotactile stimulation on the thyroid cartilage (Von) but this was not so for the other half. Participants experiencing sync misattributed the speaking to themselves and also shifted the fundamental frequency of their later utterances toward the stimulus voice. Von also contributed to these results. We show that these findings can be explained by current theories of agency, provided that the critical role of ownership over the VB is taken into account.
当我们执行一个动作时,我们通常会将该动作归因于自己,即代理感。对代理的解释包括有意识的事先行动意图,随后观察感觉后果;涉及对后果进行前馈预测并结合快速反向运动预测以实时微调动作的大脑活动;启动,例如存在执行该动作的先前命令;原因(行动意图)先于结果(行动的结果);以及满足物理因果关系的常识性归因规则。我们描述了一个实验,在该实验中,参与者在明显无法用这些理论解释的条件下错误地将一个动作归因于自己。一个从第一人称视角以3D立体呈现的真人大小虚拟身体(VB),就好像替代了真实身体,被用来诱导对VB的所有权错觉。44名实验参与者中有一半体验到VB的动作与他们自己的动作同步(同步组),另一半则不同步(不同步组)。在镜子中看到的VB会随着相应的嘴唇动作说话,对于一半的参与者,这伴随着甲状软骨上的同步振动触觉刺激(Von组),但另一半则没有。体验到同步的参与者将说话错误地归因于自己,并且还将他们后来话语的基频朝着刺激声音的方向转移。Von组也促成了这些结果。我们表明,只要考虑到对VB的所有权的关键作用,这些发现可以用当前的代理理论来解释。