Allocentric and egocentric manipulations of the sense of self-location in full-body illusions and their relation with the sense of body ownership

Self-location refers to the experience of occupying a given position in the environment. Recent research has addressed the sense of self-location as one of the key components of self-consciousness, together with the experience of owning the physical body (ownership) (Blanke and Metzinger, Trends Cogn Sci 13:7–13 in 2009. doi:10.1016/j.tics.2008.10.003). Experimentally controlled full-body illusions proved to be valuable research tools to study these components and their interaction, and to explore their underlying neural underpinning. The focus of this manuscript is to provide a close look into the nuances of different illusory experiences affecting the sense of self-location and to examine their relation to the concurrent experienced sense of body ownership. On the basis of previous reviewed studies, it is proposed that the sense of self-location may be regarded as the blending of two paralllel representations: the abstract allocentric coding of the position occupied in the environment, mainly associated with visual-perspective, and the egocentric mapping of somatosensory sensations into the external space, mainly associated with peripersonal space. Open questions to be addressed by future research are further addressed.

[1]  E. Maguire,et al.  What does the retrosplenial cortex do? , 2009, Nature Reviews Neuroscience.

[2]  Malin Björnsdotter,et al.  Posterior Cingulate Cortex Integrates the Senses of Self-Location and Body Ownership , 2015, Current Biology.

[3]  C. Barry,et al.  Neural Mechanisms of Self-Location , 2014, Current Biology.

[4]  Justin M. Harris,et al.  If I Were You: Perceptual Illusion of Body Swapping , 2008, PloS one.

[5]  Olaf Blanke,et al.  The brain network reflecting bodily self-consciousness: a functional connectivity study. , 2014, Social cognitive and affective neuroscience.

[6]  O. Blanke,et al.  Spatial aspects of bodily self-consciousness , 2009, Consciousness and Cognition.

[7]  H. Henrik Ehrsson,et al.  Disowning one’s seen real body during an out-of-body illusion , 2012, Consciousness and Cognition.

[8]  T. Metzinger,et al.  Full-body illusions and minimal phenomenal selfhood , 2009, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.

[9]  Olaf Blanke,et al.  Out-of-body experience, heautoscopy, and autoscopic hallucination of neurological origin Implications for neurocognitive mechanisms of corporeal awareness and self-consciousness , 2005, Brain Research Reviews.

[10]  H. Ehrsson The Experimental Induction of Out-of-Body Experiences , 2007, Science.

[11]  A. Maravita,et al.  Tools for the body (schema) , 2004, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.

[12]  D. Hassabis,et al.  Decoding Neuronal Ensembles in the Human Hippocampus , 2009, Current Biology.

[13]  C. Gross,et al.  A bimodal map of space: somatosensory receptive fields in the macaque putamen with corresponding visual receptive fields , 1993, Experimental Brain Research.

[14]  T. Metzinger,et al.  Video Ergo Sum: Manipulating Bodily Self-Consciousness , 2007, Science.

[15]  O. Blanke Multisensory brain mechanisms of bodily self-consciousness , 2012, Nature Reviews Neuroscience.

[16]  Krzysztof J. Gorgolewski,et al.  Dynamic network participation of functional connectivity hubs assessed by resting-state fMRI , 2014, Front. Hum. Neurosci..

[17]  O. Blanke,et al.  Multisensory Mechanisms in Temporo-Parietal Cortex Support Self-Location and First-Person Perspective , 2011, Neuron.

[18]  Konrad Paul Kording,et al.  Over my fake body: body ownership illusions for studying the multisensory basis of own-body perception , 2015, Front. Hum. Neurosci..

[19]  G. Rizzolatti,et al.  Coding of peripersonal space in inferior premotor cortex (area F4). , 1996, Journal of neurophysiology.

[20]  François Klam,et al.  ã Federation of European Neuroscience Societies Visual±vestibular interactive responses in the macaque ventral intraparietal area (VIP) , 2022 .

[21]  Olaf Blanke,et al.  Keeping in Touch with One's Self: Multisensory Mechanisms of Self-Consciousness , 2009, PloS one.

[22]  Alisa Mandrigin,et al.  Bodily ownership and self-location: Components of bodily self-consciousness , 2013, Consciousness and Cognition.

[23]  Andrew Meade,et al.  Detecting Regular Sound Changes in Linguistics as Events of Concerted Evolution , 2015, Current Biology.

[24]  M. Slater,et al.  The building blocks of the full body ownership illusion , 2013, Front. Hum. Neurosci..

[25]  O. Blanke,et al.  Alpha band oscillations correlate with illusory self‐location induced by virtual reality , 2011, The European journal of neuroscience.

[26]  M S Graziano,et al.  Coding the location of the arm by sight. , 2000, Science.

[27]  M. Slater,et al.  Sliding perspectives: dissociating ownership from self-location during full body illusions in virtual reality , 2014, Front. Hum. Neurosci..