Jenkinson Paul M, Preston Catherine
Department of Psychology, University of Hertfordshire, Hatfield, Hertfordshire, UK.
Department of Neuroscience, Karolinska Institute, Sweden.
Conscious Cogn. 2015 May;33:432-42. doi: 10.1016/j.concog.2015.02.020. Epub 2015 Mar 17.
No previous study has simultaneously examined body ownership and agency in healthy subjects during mirror self-observation. We used a moving rubber hand illusion to examine how both body ownership and agency are affected by seeing (i) the body moving in a mirror, compared with (ii) directly viewing the moving hand, and (iii) seeing a visually identical hand rotated by 180°. We elicited ownership of the hand using direct visual feedback, finding this effect was further enhanced when looking at the hand in a mirror, whereas rotating the hand 180° abolished ownership. Agency was similarly elicited using direct visual feedback, and equally so in the mirror, but again reduced for the 180° hand. We conclude that the reflected body in a mirror is treated as 'special' in the mind, and distinct from other external objects. This enables bodies and actions viewed in a mirror to be directly related to the self.
此前没有研究在健康受试者进行自我镜像观察时,同时考察身体所有权和身体能动性。我们运用移动橡皮手错觉实验,探究相比于(ii)直接观看移动的手以及(iii)观看视觉上相同但旋转了180°的手,(i)看到镜中身体移动时,身体所有权和身体能动性是如何受到影响的。我们通过直接视觉反馈引发对手的所有权,发现当在镜中看手时这种效应会进一步增强,而将手旋转180°则会消除所有权。身体能动性同样通过直接视觉反馈引发,在镜中的情况也是如此,但对于旋转180°的手,身体能动性同样会降低。我们得出结论,镜中反射出的身体在大脑中被视为“特殊的”,且与其他外部物体不同。这使得在镜中看到的身体和动作能够直接与自我联系起来。