School of Psychology and Counselling, Faculty of Health, Queensland University of Technology (QUT), Kelvin Grove, QLD, 4059, Australia.
Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation (IHBI), Queensland University of Technology (QUT), Brisbane, Australia.
Sci Rep. 2020 Nov 5;10(1):19229. doi: 10.1038/s41598-020-76235-7.
Recent theories suggest that self-consciousness, in its most elementary form, is functionally disconnected from the phenomenal body. Patients with psychosis frequently misattribute their thoughts and actions to external sources; and in certain out-of-body experiences, lucid states, and dreams body-ownership is absent but self-identification is preserved. To explain these unusual experiences, we hypothesized that self-identification depends on inferring self-location at the right angular gyrus (i.e., perspective-taking). This process relates to the discrimination of self-produced signals (endogenous attention) from environmental stimulation (exogenous attention). Therefore, when this mechanism fails, this causes altered sensations and perceptions. We combined a Full-body Illusion paradigm with brain stimulation (HD-tDCS) and found a clear causal association between right angular gyrus activation and alterations in self-location (perspective-taking). Anodal versus sham HD-tDCS resulted in: a more profound out-of-body shift (with reduced sense of agency); and a weakened ability to discriminate self from other perspectives. We conclude that self-identification is mediated in the brain by inferring self-location (i.e., perspective-taking). Self-identification can be decoupled from the bodily self, explaining phenomena associated with disembodiment. These findings present novel insights into the relationship between mind and body, and may offer important future directions for treating psychosis symptoms and rehabilitation programs to aid in the recovery from a nervous system injury. The brain's ability to locate itself might be the key mechanism for self-identification and distinguishing self from other signals (i.e., perspective-taking).
最近的理论表明,自我意识在其最基本的形式中,在功能上与现象身体分离。精神病患者经常将自己的思想和行为归因于外部来源;在某些脱离身体的体验、清醒状态和梦境中,身体所有权不存在,但自我认同得以保留。为了解释这些不寻常的体验,我们假设自我认同取决于在右角回推断自我位置(即视角转换)。这个过程与区分自我产生的信号(内源性注意)和环境刺激(外源性注意)有关。因此,当这个机制失败时,会导致感觉和知觉的改变。我们结合全身体错觉范式和脑刺激(HD-tDCS),发现右角回激活与自我位置改变(视角转换)之间存在明确的因果关系。阳极刺激与假刺激 HD-tDCS 相比:产生更深刻的脱离身体的感觉(减少自我意识);以及自我与他人视角区分能力的减弱。我们得出结论,自我认同是通过推断自我位置(即视角转换)在大脑中介导的。自我认同可以与身体自我分离,解释与脱离身体相关的现象。这些发现为身心关系提供了新的见解,并可能为治疗精神病症状和康复计划提供重要的未来方向,以帮助从神经系统损伤中恢复。大脑定位自身的能力可能是自我认同和区分自我与其他信号(即视角转换)的关键机制。