NCHCDec 16, 2015

Ownership and Agency of an Independent Supernumerary Hand Induced by an Imitation Brain-Computer Interface

arXiv:1512.05220v232 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the challenge of understanding body ownership and agency in brain-computer interface research, offering a novel illusion for studying supernumerary limbs, but it is incremental as it builds on existing rubber hand and virtual reality illusions.

The study tackled the problem of inducing feelings of ownership and control over an independent supernumerary hand using an imitation brain-computer interface, and found that subjects developed strong ownership and control over the third hand with 80% probability of correct movements, without losing ownership of their real hands.

To study body ownership and control, illusions that elicit these feelings in non-body objects are widely used. Classically introduced with the Rubber Hand Illusion, these illusions have been replicated more recently in virtual reality and by using brain-computer interfaces. Traditionally these illusions investigate the replacement of a body part by an artificial counterpart, however as brain-computer interface research develops it offers us the possibility to explore the case where non-body objects are controlled in addition to movements of our own limbs. Therefore we propose a new illusion designed to test the feeling of ownership and control of an independent supernumerary hand. Subjects are under the impression they control a virtual reality hand via a brain-computer interface, but in reality there is no causal connection between brain activity and virtual hand movement but correct movements are observed with 80% probability. These imitation brain-computer interface trials are interspersed with movements in both the subjects' real hands, which are in view throughout the experiment. We show that subjects develop strong feelings of ownership and control over the third hand, despite only receiving visual feedback with no causal link to the actual brain signals. Our illusion is crucially different from previously reported studies as we demonstrate independent ownership and control of the third hand without loss of ownership in the real hands.

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