
Will we ever be able to truly feel like we’re inhabiting a virtual world? A virtual reality twist on the classic rubber hand illusion suggests we can – and all it takes is a bit of magnetic brain stimulation.
Around 20 years ago, psychologists in Pennsylvania discovered that they could convince people that a rubber hand was their own. They placed it on a table in front of a volunteer, and stroked it while simultaneously also stroking the person’s actual hand. The experiment inspired further “bodily illusion” experiments that mess with our sense of self in strange ways, giving us the feeling of “embodiment” – ownership of a body part that is not really one’s own.
Now these illusions are going high-tech, and neuroscientists have managed to create embodiment using non-invasive brain stimulation, without actually touching a volunteer. “We wanted to know how much these illusions were based on the fact that you have to stimulate the body,” says , at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology.
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Virtual embodiment
Rather than stimulate a person’s hand by touching it, Bassolino and her colleagues used transcranial magnetic stimulation instead. Using a magnetic coil, they zapped magnetic pulses at each volunteer’s motor cortex – the part of the brain responsible for body movements. They did this while each volunteer was wearing a virtual reality headset, and zapped each person so that their hands twitched in time with the virtual hands they were watching.

Out of the 32 volunteers, 80 per cent said they’d felt like the virtual hand was their own during two minutes of stimulation. This is the first time such an illusion has been achieved using noninvasive brain stimulation.
The team hope that their research may lead to new ways of treating people who have had strokes that have made them unable to recognise certain limbs as their own.
“They blurred the lines between what’s virtual and what’s human,” says , at the Cleveland Clinic, Ohio. Because our brains don’t seem to distinguish between real and artificial inputs, we could theoretically completely embody a virtual avatar, he says. “But as of right now, we’re just opening the door to this world.”
European Journal of Neuroscience
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