FBI; Replacing The Phantom Self

in #psychology6 years ago

Sorry, this is not some conspiracy starring the Federal Bureau of Investigation. FBI stands for Full Body Illusion in this title. In my regular pondering over what is real and what my role in reality might be, I stumbled upon this illusion we all share.


phantom_limb_mirror.jpg
Image by Golan Levin - source: Flickr

Have you ever heard about phantom limbs? It's the widespread phenomenon among people who had one of their limbs amputated, whereby these people have the sensation that the limb is still there. They even sometimes feel pain in these limbs that are long gone, so called phantom limb pains. This is something we can all understand; the brain has built over years a connectome with the limb attached, and that neural structure persists, even after the limb is gone.

But we can turn this around. We can also make the brain incorporate a fake limb as an integral part of our body. I think many, if not, most of you will have heard about the "rubber hand illusion". If not, please watch this short video:


The Rubber Hand Illusion - Horizon - BBC

After watching the fake hand and simultaneously feeling your real hand being stroked for a short while, the brain has already made the structural adjustments, through a property we call neuroplasticity, needed to accept the rubber hand as the real hand. This is amazing in it's implications.

In addition to hanging on to absent parts of our body, the brain is capable of adopting new parts as our own. This has given birth to the science of cognitive neuroprosthetics; imagine what an extended rubber hand illusion could do for people with prosthetics? To truly be able to see the prosthetic arm as one's own? But we don't stop there; now that we have advanced virtual reality technology, we can even train the brain to accept an entire virtual body as our own! Movies like Avatar and Ready Player One don't seem so far fetched anymore now, do they?

Experiments have been done to see how far we can take this rubber hand illusion. Subjects were placed on a "multi-stroking machine" while looking at a virtual body, an avatar. The machine stroked the subject on various body parts, synchronized carefully with what the subject saw done to the avatar. After a while the subjects experience a feeling of disembodiment as they start accepting the avatar's body as their own. This even happens on a subconscious level as they observed that the subjects' body temperature dropped significantly during the virtual disembodiment. The audio is very bad, but here's that experiment:


Full body illusion is associated with widespread skin temperature reduction

So, what is real? It seems real is whatever my mind tells me is real. But it also seems my mind doesn't always perceives what's real; we don't see with our eyes, we perceive with our minds. And our minds don't passively record reality, instead they actively construct a model of reality, while constantly making predictions about future states of that reality. And that model trails reality by quite some time, at least the part of the model that we're conscious of. Scientists have since long shown that the brain already made a decision what to do, half a second before we are consciously making that decision. This is exactly what heated the fire under the whole discussion about the existence of free will.

Under "normal" circumstances we feel that we are a self in three major ways. First it is in the recognition that we are the cause of the actions and movements of our body. Second is that we feel that we are inside our own bodies. And third is a sense of ownership over our own bodies. This is deeply rooted inside us; in a previous article I discussed the connectome of C. Elegans roundworm. It's a simple creature and has the only brain we have been able to map 100%. Of the 300 or so neurons, one has the simple task of differentiating between "worm" and "not worm", to prevent it from eating it's own tail-end. That could be one of the first beginnings of the complex self-consciousness we have developed ourself. C. Elegans is a common ancestor after all.

The worm won't be fooled by a "rubber worm-tail illusion" though; there's no misdirecting that one neuron. The worm has no "self" and mostly only exists with a very narrow range of experience, if any at all, where we do recognize a "self" as the subject of all the diverse experiences we have and as the physical body that houses the self. But that's where the disturbing overlap takes place; our body is also just a model, part of the constructed reality inside our minds. And our minds can easily be fooled in it's constant efforts to create a coherent view on the world with ourself in it. Ah well, that's also what makes us capable of incredible imagination and using that imagination to leave the real world; like when you're watching a good movie and you look down, only to suddenly realize that all the popcorn is gone...


Body-swap Illusion Tricks Minds in New Study


Thanks so much for visiting my blog and reading my posts dear reader, I appreciate that a lot :-) If you like my content, please consider leaving a comment, upvote or resteem. I'll be back here tomorrow and sincerely hope you'll join me. Until then, keep steeming!


wave-13 divider odrau steem

Recent articles you might be interested in:

Latest article >>>>>>>>>>>Crypto Markets On The Move
Evolution's Greatest GiftEOS And Ethereum Married On Bancor
9/11 And The Willing Suspension Of DisbeliefRace Rage
Rage Against The Dying Of The LightThe Reality Of Social Engineering

wave-13 divider odrau steem

Thanks for stopping by and reading. If you really liked this content, if you disagree (or if you do agree), please leave a comment. Of course, upvotes, follows, resteems are all greatly appreciated, but nothing brings me and you more growth than sharing our ideas. It's what Steemit is made for!
Helpienaut_post_banner_02-01.png

I am a proud helpinaut! @Helpie is looking for new members! Helpie has been growing nicely and we are always on the lookout for new valuable members. We are very supportive and community oriented. If you would like to be scouted for @helpie , please drop a comment on THIS POST or contact @paintingangels on discord at paintingangels(serena)#3668.

wave-13 divider odrau steem

Just for Full Disclosure, I'm invested in these crypto-currencies:

Bitcoin | Litecoin | EOS | OmiseGo | FunFair | KIN | Pillar | DENT | Polymath | XDCE | 0x | Decred | Ethereum | Carmel | XYO

wave-13 divider odrau steem

@helpie is a WITNESS now! So please help @helpie help you by voting for us here!Helpie_01.png

Sort:  

Congratulations! Your post has been selected as a daily Steemit truffle! It is listed on rank 10 of all contributions awarded today. You can find the TOP DAILY TRUFFLE PICKS HERE.

I upvoted your contribution because to my mind your post is at least 6 SBD worth and should receive 161 votes. It's now up to the lovely Steemit community to make this come true.

I am TrufflePig, an Artificial Intelligence Bot that helps minnows and content curators using Machine Learning. If you are curious how I select content, you can find an explanation here!

Have a nice day and sincerely yours,
trufflepig
TrufflePig

Inside the top 10!! I'm honored, thanks so much @trufflepig :-)

Very cool stuff here right up my alley, lifting the veil of Maya or illusion. I appreciated the lead in too 😂 Had it been about the bureau I'd have possibly not read the entire post, nice work!

Posted using Partiko Android

Thanks so much for stopping by and leaving a comment @skramatters, I really do appreciate that :-)

Scientists have since long shown that the brain already made a decision what to do, half a second before we are consciously making that decision. This is exactly what heated the fire under the whole discussion about the existence of free will.

What this cause me to wonder, is why those who are so worried with the idea of "free will" don't trust their own brains? It's not like there's a disconnect, except in their assumption that "Ancient = Inferior"? It occurred to me the other day, that in every way that matters... Our "conscious self" is just a waking dream experienced by the stately, noble beasts which play host to us. We "sophisticated entities" are but a fleeting fiction... a very interesting manifestation of an incredibly common evolutionary adaptation. Intelligence is hardly unique to the human species, much less emotion...

The more and more that I accept how "not-so-exceptional" that humans are, the more miraculous and sacred they become, in my eyes. For those poor bastards that so limit themselves as to need a creationary deity to bestow their feeling of worthiness... I kinda, sorta pity... Not trying to be a judgemental shit-ass or nothing, but... When one understands just a little bit about evolutionary theory, the stupefying magnitude of our existence as a "rational beast" much less the probability of any individual manifestation thereof (IE: person) is difficult to actually comprehend... it's hard to explain, in any commonly relate-able way, just how fucking BIG A DEAL a person, -any- person, is...

prettymuchhernoseistoobigWoOLh.jpg

Even Melvin...

Driving feels different than being driven. The illusion of free will is a necessary one; we need to feel in control, to have agency over our own bodies and minds. I can't really imagine otherwise, I can't remember a day when I've not had this feeling, so it's impossible for me to comment on what it would be like without this deep rooted sense of control. But this is why I agree that the discussion about free will is interesting in science, but useless in everyday live.

Also we fear what we can't see and our subconscious is forever hidden. I believe these are the main reasons why most just can't accept that free will doen't really exist. I've had friends who had "black-outs" after a drinking night and were so drunk they started doing things they'd never normally do. That was all good fun, but I always stayed worried about the part where they said the next morning that they remembered nothing. One of them ran full speed into a three foot high climbing rack for children on a playground and woke up with his entire stomach black and blue, very painful... But he didn't know who did that to him. He didn't remember he did that to himself. But during the "accident" he acted drunk, but was acting by himself. I guess it's scary for some people to know that they are capable to do things that they don't think they're capable to do, because "it's just not like them". We fear losing control of ourself. We need to feel in control of ourself and our actions and our choices.

My two cents on the whole unnecessary debate on free will. And free will isn't the only thing evolution deemed necessary for us to be fooled about :-) Like that Melvin isn't a big deal... Well, he is and besides, he's right too ;-)

This post is very interesting!

Thanks, @tulio77! Glad you liked it :-)

Hi @zyx066!

Your post was upvoted by @steem-ua, new Steem dApp, using UserAuthority for algorithmic post curation!
Your UA account score is currently 3.527 which ranks you at #6134 across all Steem accounts.
Your rank has improved 9 places in the last three days (old rank 6143).

In our last Algorithmic Curation Round, consisting of 196 contributions, your post is ranked at #66.

Evaluation of your UA score:
  • You're on the right track, try to gather more followers.
  • The readers appreciate your great work!
  • You have already shown user engagement, try to improve it further.

Feel free to join our @steem-ua Discord server

Coin Marketplace

STEEM 0.16
TRX 0.12
JST 0.026
BTC 56834.19
ETH 2500.74
USDT 1.00
SBD 2.27