[Science] People with autism are less likely to fall for an out-of-body illusion – AI

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[Science] People with autism are less likely to fall for an out-of-body illusion – AI


Which hand is real?Tara Moore/Getty By Clare WilsonPeople with autism don’t seem to experience a virtual reality illusion about their body that people who don’t have autism usually fall for. Some autistic people view autism as a different way of seeing the world. Jane Aspell at Anglia Ruskin University in the UK and her team wondered if people with autism may perceive a particular illusion differently. This illusion involves wearing virtual reality goggles that let you view your own body as if you are looking at someone else. Wearers of the goggles see this avatar being stroked on its back, at the same time as their own back is stroked in real life. This commonly makes people feel like they are starting to embody the virtual avatar, and their sense of where they are located shifts towards it. Advertisement Read more: Autism can bring extra abilities and now we’re finding out why Aspell’s team recreated this illusion for 51 volunteers, about half of whom had autism. Questionnaires afterwards found that the autistic participants weren’t susceptible to the illusion. This suggests that, in autism, “the way the brain is generating a sense of self is somehow different”, says Aspell. Before the virtual reality task, the volunteers were asked to carry out a test that measured the size of the area surrounding them that they unconsciously saw as personal space. “Our sense of self doesn’t end at the skin – there’s a hazy bubble around us,” says Aspell. The volunteers with autism had a personal space about 10 centimetres smaller than those who didn’t have the condition. Other work has shown people with autism are also less susceptible to the “rubber hand illusion”, a similar scenario to the virtual body illusion that tricks people into feeling that a rubber hand is their own hand. Journal reference: Autism, DOI: 10.1177/1362361319838950 Read more: Virtual out-of-body experience reduces your fear of death More on these topics: neuroscience autism

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