Authors
Richard Thomas, Clare Press, Patrick Haggard
Publication date
2006/3/1
Journal
Acta psychologica
Volume
121
Issue
3
Pages
317-330
Publisher
North-Holland
Description
The ability to understand events that happen to other people is a characteristic feature of the human mind. Here, we investigate whether the links between mental representation of one’s own body and the bodies of other people could form the basis of human social representations. We studied interpersonal body representation (IBR) in a series of behavioural cueing experiments. Subjects responded to tactile events on their own body after a visual event was presented in either the corresponding anatomical location on a model’s body, or in a non-corresponding location. We found that reactions were faster when the visual cue was in register with the tactile stimulation. This effect was absent when identical visual events were presented on a non-body control stimulus, suggesting a body specific mechanism for interpersonal registration of purely sensory events. Similar interpersonal systems have been demonstrated …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
R Thomas, C Press, P Haggard - Acta psychologica, 2006