Illusions of having small or large invisible bodies influence visual perception of object size

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Abstract

The size of our body influences the perceived size of the world so that objects appear larger to children than to adults. The mechanisms underlying this effect remain unclear. It has been difficult to dissociate visual rescaling of the external environment based on an individual's visible body from visual rescaling based on a central multisensory body representation. To differentiate these potential causal mechanisms, we manipulated body representation without a visible body by taking advantage of recent developments in body representation research. Participants experienced the illusion of having a small or large invisible body while object-size perception was tested. Our findings show that the perceived size of test-objects was determined by the size of the invisible body (inverse relation), and by the strength of the invisible body illusion. These findings demonstrate how central body representation directly influences visual size perception, without the need for a visible body, by rescaling the spatial representation of the environment.

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APA

Van Der Hoort, B., & Ehrsson, H. H. (2016). Illusions of having small or large invisible bodies influence visual perception of object size. Scientific Reports, 6. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep34530

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