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The Rubber Hand Illusion evaluated using different stimulation modalities

Svensson, Pamela LU ; Malesevic, Nebojsa LU ; Wijk, Ulrika LU ; Björkman, Anders LU and Antfolk, Christian LU (2023) In Frontiers in Neuroscience 17.
Abstract
Tactile feedback plays a vital role in inducing ownership and improving motor control of prosthetic hands. However, commercially available prosthetic hands typically do not provide tactile feedback and because of that the prosthetic user must rely on visual input to adjust the grip. The classical rubber hand illusion (RHI) where a brush is stroking the rubber hand, and the user's hidden hand synchronously can induce ownership of a rubber hand. In the classic RHI the stimulation is modalitymatched, meaning that the stimulus on the real hand matches the stimulus on the rubber hand. The RHI has also been used in previous studies with a prosthetic hand as the "rubber hand", suggesting that a hand prosthesis can be incorporated within the... (More)
Tactile feedback plays a vital role in inducing ownership and improving motor control of prosthetic hands. However, commercially available prosthetic hands typically do not provide tactile feedback and because of that the prosthetic user must rely on visual input to adjust the grip. The classical rubber hand illusion (RHI) where a brush is stroking the rubber hand, and the user's hidden hand synchronously can induce ownership of a rubber hand. In the classic RHI the stimulation is modalitymatched, meaning that the stimulus on the real hand matches the stimulus on the rubber hand. The RHI has also been used in previous studies with a prosthetic hand as the "rubber hand", suggesting that a hand prosthesis can be incorporated within the amputee's body scheme. Interestingly, previous studies have shown that stimulation with a mismatched modality, where the rubber hand was brushed, and vibrations were felt on the hidden hand also induced the RHI.The aim of this study was to compare how well mechanotactile, vibrotactile, and electrotactile feedback induced the RHI in able-bodied participants and forearm amputees. 27 participants with intact hands and three transradial amputees took part in a modified RHI experiment. The rubber hand was stroked with a brush, and the participant's hidden hand/residual limb received stimulation with either brush stroking, electricity, pressure, or vibration. The three latter stimulations were modality mismatched with regard to the brushstroke. Participants were tested for ten different combinations (stimulation blocks) where the stimulations were applied on the volar (glabrous skin), and dorsal (hairy skin) sides of the hand. Outcome was assessed using two standard tests (questionnaire and proprioceptive drift). All types of stimulation induced RHI but electrical and vibration stimulation induced a stronger RHI than pressure. After completing more stimulation blocks, the proprioceptive drift test showed that the difference between pre-and post-test was reduced. This indicates that the illusion was drifting toward the rubber hand further into the session. (Less)
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organization
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Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Frontiers in Neuroscience
volume
17
publisher
Frontiers Media S. A.
external identifiers
  • scopus:85172985267
  • pmid:37781250
ISSN
1662-4548
DOI
10.3389/fnins.2023.1237053
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
244dbd4b-026a-4bfa-bd00-1d3601df7158
date added to LUP
2023-09-12 08:40:20
date last changed
2023-12-14 03:00:48
@article{244dbd4b-026a-4bfa-bd00-1d3601df7158,
  abstract     = {{Tactile feedback plays a vital role in inducing ownership and improving motor control of prosthetic hands. However, commercially available prosthetic hands typically do not provide tactile feedback and because of that the prosthetic user must rely on visual input to adjust the grip. The classical rubber hand illusion (RHI) where a brush is stroking the rubber hand, and the user's hidden hand synchronously can induce ownership of a rubber hand. In the classic RHI the stimulation is modalitymatched, meaning that the stimulus on the real hand matches the stimulus on the rubber hand. The RHI has also been used in previous studies with a prosthetic hand as the "rubber hand", suggesting that a hand prosthesis can be incorporated within the amputee's body scheme. Interestingly, previous studies have shown that stimulation with a mismatched modality, where the rubber hand was brushed, and vibrations were felt on the hidden hand also induced the RHI.The aim of this study was to compare how well mechanotactile, vibrotactile, and electrotactile feedback induced the RHI in able-bodied participants and forearm amputees. 27 participants with intact hands and three transradial amputees took part in a modified RHI experiment. The rubber hand was stroked with a brush, and the participant's hidden hand/residual limb received stimulation with either brush stroking, electricity, pressure, or vibration. The three latter stimulations were modality mismatched with regard to the brushstroke. Participants were tested for ten different combinations (stimulation blocks) where the stimulations were applied on the volar (glabrous skin), and dorsal (hairy skin) sides of the hand. Outcome was assessed using two standard tests (questionnaire and proprioceptive drift). All types of stimulation induced RHI but electrical and vibration stimulation induced a stronger RHI than pressure. After completing more stimulation blocks, the proprioceptive drift test showed that the difference between pre-and post-test was reduced. This indicates that the illusion was drifting toward the rubber hand further into the session.}},
  author       = {{Svensson, Pamela and Malesevic, Nebojsa and Wijk, Ulrika and Björkman, Anders and Antfolk, Christian}},
  issn         = {{1662-4548}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{09}},
  publisher    = {{Frontiers Media S. A.}},
  series       = {{Frontiers in Neuroscience}},
  title        = {{The Rubber Hand Illusion evaluated using different stimulation modalities}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2023.1237053}},
  doi          = {{10.3389/fnins.2023.1237053}},
  volume       = {{17}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}