Erdeniz Burak, Tekgün Ege, Lenggenhager Bigna, Lopez Christophe
İzmir University of Economics, Department of Psychology, İzmir, Turkey.
University of Konstanz, Department of Psychology, Konstanz, Germany.
Conscious Cogn. 2023 Aug;113:103547. doi: 10.1016/j.concog.2023.103547. Epub 2023 Jun 28.
The peripersonal space, that is, the limited space surrounding the body, involves multisensory coding and representation of the self in space. Previous studies have shown that peripersonal space representation and the visual perspective on the environment can be dramatically altered when neurotypical individuals self-identify with a distant avatar (i.e., in virtual reality) or during clinical conditions (i.e., out-of-body experience, heautoscopy, depersonalization). Despite its role in many cognitive/social functions, the perception of peripersonal space in dreams, and its relationship with the perception of other characters (interpersonal distance in dreams), remain largely uncharted. The present study aimed to explore the visuospatial properties of this space, which is likely to underlie self-location as well as self/other distinction in dreams. 530 healthy volunteers answered a web-based questionnaire to measure their dominant visuo-spatial perspective in dreams, the frequency of recall for felt distances between their dream self and other dream characters, and the dreamers' viewing angle of other dream characters. Most participants reported dream experiences from a first-person perspective (1PP) (82%) compared to a third-person perspective (3PP) (18%). Independent of their dream perspective, participants reported that they generally perceived other dream characters in their close space, that is, at distance of either between 0 and 90 cm, or 90-180 cm, than in further spaces (180-270 cm). Regardless of the perspective (1PP or 3PP), both groups also reported more frequently seeing other dream characters from eye level (0° angle of viewing) than from above (30° and 60°) or below eye level (-30° and -60°). Moreover, the intensity of sensory experiences in dreams, as measured by the Bodily Self-Consciousness in Dreams Questionnaire, was higher in individuals who habitually see other dream characters closer to their personal dream self (i.e., within 0-90 cm and 90-180 cm). These preliminary findings offer a new, phenomenological account of space representation in dreams with regards to the felt presence of others. They might provide insights not only to our understanding of how dreams are formed, but also to the type of neurocomputations involved in self/other distinction.
个人周边空间,即身体周围的有限空间,涉及自我在空间中的多感官编码和表征。先前的研究表明,当神经正常个体与远处的虚拟形象(即在虚拟现实中)自我认同或在临床情况下(即出体体验、自体幻觉、人格解体)时,个人周边空间表征和对环境的视觉视角会发生显著改变。尽管其在许多认知/社会功能中发挥作用,但梦境中个人周边空间的感知及其与其他角色感知(梦境中的人际距离)的关系在很大程度上仍未得到探索。本研究旨在探究这个空间的视觉空间特性,这可能是梦境中自我定位以及自我/他人区分的基础。530名健康志愿者回答了一份基于网络的问卷,以测量他们在梦境中的主导视觉空间视角、对梦境自我与其他梦境角色之间感知距离的回忆频率,以及梦者对其他梦境角色的视角。与第三人称视角(3PP)(18%)相比,大多数参与者报告的梦境体验是第一人称视角(1PP)(82%)。无论他们的梦境视角如何,参与者报告称,他们通常在近距离空间(即距离在0至90厘米或90至180厘米之间)而非更远空间(180至270厘米)感知到其他梦境角色。无论视角是第一人称(1PP)还是第三人称(3PP),两组参与者还报告说,比起从上方(30°和60°)或低于眼睛水平(-30°和-60°),他们更频繁地从眼睛水平(0°视角)看到其他梦境角色。此外,根据梦境中身体自我意识问卷测量,在习惯上看到其他梦境角色更靠近其个人梦境自我(即在0至90厘米和90至180厘米范围内)的个体中,梦境中感官体验的强度更高。这些初步发现为梦境中关于他人感知存在的空间表征提供了一种新的现象学解释。它们不仅可能为我们理解梦境如何形成提供见解,还可能为自我/他人区分中涉及的神经计算类型提供见解。