دانلود مقاله ISI انگلیسی شماره 123118
ترجمه فارسی عنوان مقاله

حساسیت غیرمعمولی به توهم دستکاری لاستیک مرتبط با ادراک درد حسی موضعی

عنوان انگلیسی
Atypical susceptibility to the rubber hand illusion linked to sensory-localised vicarious pain perception
کد مقاله سال انتشار تعداد صفحات مقاله انگلیسی
123118 2018 10 صفحه PDF
منبع

Publisher : Elsevier - Science Direct (الزویر - ساینس دایرکت)

Journal : Consciousness and Cognition, Volume 60, April 2018, Pages 62-71

ترجمه کلمات کلیدی
توهم دست دستی لاستیک، ادراک درد مؤثر، نمایندگی های مشترک، مالکیت بدن،
کلمات کلیدی انگلیسی
Rubber hand illusion; Vicarious pain perceptions; Shared representations; Body ownership;
پیش نمایش مقاله
پیش نمایش مقاله  حساسیت غیرمعمولی به توهم دستکاری لاستیک مرتبط با ادراک درد حسی موضعی

چکیده انگلیسی

The Rubber Hand Illusion (RHI) paradigm has been widely used to investigate the sense of body ownership. People who report experiencing the pain of others are hypothesised to have differences in computing body ownership and, hence, we predicted that they would perform atypically on the RHI. The Vicarious Pain Questionnaire (VPQ), was used to divide participants into three groups: (1) non-responders (people who report no pain when seeing someone else experiencing physical pain), (2) sensory-localised responders (report sensory qualities and a localised feeling of pain) and (3) affective-general responders (report a generalised and emotional feeling of pain). The sensory-localised group, showed susceptibility to the RHI (increased proprioceptive drift) irrespective of whether stimulation was synchronous or asynchronous, whereas the other groups only showed the RHI in the synchronous condition. This is not a general bias to always incorporate the dummy hand as we did not find increased susceptibility in other conditions (seeing touch without feeling touch, or feeling touch without seeing touch), but there was a trend for this group to incorporate the dummy hand when it was stroked with a laser light. Although individual differences in the RHI have been noted previously, this particular pattern is rare. It suggests a greater malleability (i.e. insensitivity to asynchrony) in the conditions in which other bodies influence own-body judgments.