- 著者
 
          - 
             
             Satoshi Shibuya
             
             Satoshi Unenaka
             
             Yukari Ohki
             
          
 
          
          
          - 出版者
 
          - 一般社団法人日本体力医学会
 
          
          
          - 雑誌
 
          - The Journal of Physical Fitness and Sports Medicine (ISSN:21868131)
 
          
          
          - 巻号頁・発行日
 
          - vol.4, no.2, pp.213-216, 2015-05-25 (Released:2015-05-28)
 
          
          
          - 参考文献数
 
          - 32
 
          
          
        
        
        
        We perceive that our body belongs to us and is a coherent and unified entity. Therefore, body-ownership is fundamental to self-consciousness. To explore body-ownership in normal subjects, researchers have intensively used a bodily illusion known as the rubber hand illusion (RHI). This review article focuses on RHI studies. In a standard RHI paradigm, the sight of the participant’s hand is occluded, while a life-sized fake hand is visible. Synchronous stroking of the fake and real hands with paintbrushes elicits a subjective sensation that the fake hand is their own. The RHI is generally demonstrated using a self-report questionnaire as a subjective measurement, and proprioceptive drift (i.e., mislocalization of the real hand toward the fake hand) as an objective measurement. There are two constraints for inducing the RHI: visuo-tactile synchrony and consistency between multisensory inputs and body representations. The RHI can also be induced by visuo-motor correlations: viewing movements of the rubber hand that are synchronous with movements of the real hand. In this RHI variant, participants experience body-ownership as well as agency, which is a type of bodily self-consciousness that one is initiating and controlling his/her own actions. Neuroimaging studies suggest that the RHI is associated with a wide range of neural substrates, including fronto-parietal networks. In sum, accumulating evidence from the RHI suggests that body-ownership is very flexible, and the brain can incorporate a non-corporal object into a person’s own body.