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How to leave your body

http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2011-02/ki-htl021511.php

Leave your body and shake hands with yourself, gain an extra limb or change into

a robot for a while. Swedish neuroscientist Henrik Ehrsson has demonstrated that

the brain's image of the body is negotiable. Applications stretch from

touch-sensitive prostheses to robotics and virtual worlds.

Ask a child if their hands belong to them and they will answer, " Of course! " But

how does the brain actually identify its own body? And why do we experience our

centre of awareness as located inside a physical body?

In a series of studies, neuroscientist Henrik Ehrsson of the Swedish medical

university Karolinska Institutet has shown that the brain's perception of its

own body can alter remarkably. Through the coordinated manipulation of the

different senses, subjects can be made to feel that their body suddenly includes

artificial objects or that they have departed their body entirely to enter

another. His experiments have been published in Science and other leading

scientific periodicals and journals, and have garnered considered international

attention.

" By clarifying how the normal brain produces a sense of ownership of the body,

we can learn to project ownership onto artificial bodies and simulated virtual

ones, and even make two people have the experience of swapping bodies with one

another, " says Dr Ehrsson.

The research addresses fundamental questions about the relationship between mind

and body, which have been the topic of theological, philosophical and

psychological discussion for centuries but which have only recently been

accessible to experimental investigation. The key to solving the problem is to

identify the multisensory mechanisms through which the central nervous system

distinguishes between sensory signals from the body and from its environment.

The research may have important implications in a wide range of areas, such as

developing hand prostheses that feel more like real hands and the next

generation of virtual reality applications, where the sense of self is projected

onto computer-generated 'virtual bodies'.

Researchers are currently looking into what kind of bodies the brain can

perceive as its own. The self can, for example, be transferred into a body of

another sex, age and size, but not into objects such as blocks or chairs. One

ongoing project with potential applications in robotics is examining if the

perceived body can be shrunk to the size of a Barbie doll; another is studying

if the brain can accept a body with three arms.

" This could give paralysed people a third prosthetic arm, which they would

perceive as real, " says Dr Ehrsson.

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Very interesting.

>

> How to leave your body

>

> http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2011-02/ki-htl021511.php

>

> Leave your body and shake hands with yourself, gain an extra limb or change

into a robot for a while. Swedish neuroscientist Henrik Ehrsson has demonstrated

that the brain's image of the body is negotiable. Applications stretch from

touch-sensitive prostheses to robotics and virtual worlds.

>

> Ask a child if their hands belong to them and they will answer, " Of course! "

But how does the brain actually identify its own body? And why do we experience

our centre of awareness as located inside a physical body?

>

> In a series of studies, neuroscientist Henrik Ehrsson of the Swedish medical

university Karolinska Institutet has shown that the brain's perception of its

own body can alter remarkably. Through the coordinated manipulation of the

different senses, subjects can be made to feel that their body suddenly includes

artificial objects or that they have departed their body entirely to enter

another. His experiments have been published in Science and other leading

scientific periodicals and journals, and have garnered considered international

attention.

>

> " By clarifying how the normal brain produces a sense of ownership of the body,

we can learn to project ownership onto artificial bodies and simulated virtual

ones, and even make two people have the experience of swapping bodies with one

another, " says Dr Ehrsson.

>

> The research addresses fundamental questions about the relationship between

mind and body, which have been the topic of theological, philosophical and

psychological discussion for centuries but which have only recently been

accessible to experimental investigation. The key to solving the problem is to

identify the multisensory mechanisms through which the central nervous system

distinguishes between sensory signals from the body and from its environment.

>

> The research may have important implications in a wide range of areas, such as

developing hand prostheses that feel more like real hands and the next

generation of virtual reality applications, where the sense of self is projected

onto computer-generated 'virtual bodies'.

>

> Researchers are currently looking into what kind of bodies the brain can

perceive as its own. The self can, for example, be transferred into a body of

another sex, age and size, but not into objects such as blocks or chairs. One

ongoing project with potential applications in robotics is examining if the

perceived body can be shrunk to the size of a Barbie doll; another is studying

if the brain can accept a body with three arms.

>

> " This could give paralysed people a third prosthetic arm, which they would

perceive as real, " says Dr Ehrsson.

>

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