Salomon Roy, Noel Jean-Paul, Łukowska Marta, Faivre Nathan, Metzinger Thomas, Serino Andrea, Blanke Olaf
Center for Neuroprosthetics, School of Life Sciences, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland; Laboratory of Cognitive Neuroscience, Brain Mind Institute, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland; Gonda Multidisciplinary Brain Research Center, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan, Israel.
Center for Neuroprosthetics, School of Life Sciences, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland; Laboratory of Cognitive Neuroscience, Brain Mind Institute, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland; Vanderbilt Brain Institute, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, USA.
Cognition. 2017 Sep;166:174-183. doi: 10.1016/j.cognition.2017.05.028. Epub 2017 Jun 1.
Recent studies have highlighted the role of multisensory integration as a key mechanism of self-consciousness. In particular, integration of bodily signals within the peripersonal space (PPS) underlies the experience of the self in a body we own (self-identification) and that is experienced as occupying a specific location in space (self-location), two main components of bodily self-consciousness (BSC). Experiments investigating the effects of multisensory integration on BSC have typically employed supra-threshold sensory stimuli, neglecting the role of unconscious sensory signals in BSC, as tested in other consciousness research. Here, we used psychophysical techniques to test whether multisensory integration of bodily stimuli underlying BSC also occurs for multisensory inputs presented below the threshold of conscious perception. Our results indicate that visual stimuli rendered invisible through continuous flash suppression boost processing of tactile stimuli on the body (Exp. 1), and enhance the perception of near-threshold tactile stimuli (Exp. 2), only once they entered PPS. We then employed unconscious multisensory stimulation to manipulate BSC. Participants were presented with tactile stimulation on their body and with visual stimuli on a virtual body, seen at a distance, which were either visible or rendered invisible. We found that participants reported higher self-identification with the virtual body in the synchronous visuo-tactile stimulation (as compared to asynchronous stimulation; Exp. 3), and shifted their self-location toward the virtual body (Exp.4), even if stimuli were fully invisible. Our results indicate that multisensory inputs, even outside of awareness, are integrated and affect the phenomenological content of self-consciousness, grounding BSC firmly in the field of psychophysical consciousness studies.
最近的研究强调了多感官整合作为自我意识关键机制的作用。特别是,个人周边空间(PPS)内身体信号的整合是我们对自己身体的自我体验(自我识别)以及体验到其在空间中占据特定位置(自我定位)的基础,这是身体自我意识(BSC)的两个主要组成部分。研究多感官整合对BSC影响的实验通常采用阈上感觉刺激,忽略了无意识感觉信号在BSC中的作用,而其他意识研究对此进行了测试。在这里,我们使用心理物理学技术来测试BSC背后的身体刺激的多感官整合是否也发生在意识感知阈值以下呈现的多感官输入中。我们的结果表明,通过连续闪光抑制变得不可见的视觉刺激会增强身体上触觉刺激的处理(实验1),并增强对接近阈值的触觉刺激的感知(实验2),前提是这些视觉刺激进入了PPS。然后,我们采用无意识多感官刺激来操纵BSC。向参与者的身体施加触觉刺激,并在远处呈现虚拟身体上的视觉刺激,这些视觉刺激要么可见,要么不可见。我们发现,参与者在同步视觉 - 触觉刺激中报告与虚拟身体有更高的自我认同感(与异步刺激相比;实验3),并且将他们的自我定位向虚拟身体转移(实验4),即使刺激完全不可见。我们的结果表明,即使在意识之外的多感官输入也会被整合并影响自我意识的现象学内容,从而将BSC稳固地置于心理物理学意识研究领域。