The “embreathment” illusion highlights the role of breathing in corporeal awareness

Author:

Monti Alessandro12ORCID,Porciello Giuseppina12ORCID,Tieri Gaetano23,Aglioti Salvatore M.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Sapienza, Università di Roma and Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia, Center for Life Nano Science, Rome, Italy

2. IRCCS Fondazione Santa Lucia, Rome, Italy

3. Virtual Reality Laboratory, Università Telematica Unitelma Sapienza, Rome, Italy

Abstract

Recent theories posit that physiological signals contribute to corporeal awareness, the basic feeling that one has a body (body ownership) that acts according to one’s will (body agency) and occupies a specific position (body location). Combining physiological recordings with immersive virtual reality, we found that an ecological mapping of real respiratory patterns onto a virtual body illusorily changes corporeal awareness. This new way of inducing a respiratory bodily illusion, called “embreathment,” revealed that breathing is almost as important as visual appearance for inducing body ownership and more important than any other cue for body agency. These effects were moderated by individual levels of interoception, as assessed through a standard heartbeat-counting task and a new “pneumoception” task. By showing that respiratory, visual, and spatial signals exert a specific and weighted influence on the fundamental feeling that one is an embodied agent, we pave the way for a comprehensive hierarchical model of corporeal awareness. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Our body is the only object we sense from the inside; however, it is unclear how much inner physiology contributes to the global sensation of having a body and controlling it. We combine respiration recordings with immersive virtual reality and find that making a virtual body breathe like the real body gives an illusory sense of ownership and agency over the avatar, elucidating the role of a key physiological process like breathing in corporeal awareness.

Funder

European Research Council

Sapienza, Università di Roma

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology,General Neuroscience

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