• Most Popular
  • Most Shared
Vincent Padois, head tutor at the Pierre and Marie Curie University who teaches robotics and is babysitting the Paris ICub, makes a demonstration with ICub robot, a ?hybrid embodied cognitive system for a humanoid robot" about 1 metre (3.2 feet) high, at the Pierre and Marie Curie University in Paris September 4, 2009. Six versions of ICub exist in laboratories across Europe, where scientists are painstakingly tweaking its electronic brain to make it capable of learning, just like a human child and hoping it will learn how to adapt its behaviour to changing circumstances, offering new insights into the development of human consciousness.   REUTERS/Philippe Wojazer

Pictures of the year: Technology

A look at the year's best science and technology photos.   Slideshow 

    Research sheds light on out-of-body experiences

    LONDON
    Thu Aug 23, 2007 3:44pm EDT

    LONDON (Reuters) - Researchers have found a way to induce out-of-body experiences using virtual-reality goggles, helping to explain a phenomenon reported by about one in 10 people.

    Science  |  Technology

    The illusion of watching oneself from several feet (meters) away while awake is often reported by people undergoing strokes or epileptic seizures or using drugs.

    In the studies published in Thursday's Science journal, two teams of researchers managed to induce the effect in healthy people by scrambling their senses of vision and touch with the aid of the goggles.

    "We ... describe an illusion during which healthy participants experienced a virtual body as if it were their own, and localized their 'selves' outside their body borders at a different position in space," wrote Olaf Blanke, a researcher at the Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne in Switzerland.

    One team, led by Henrik Ehrsson at University College London, had volunteers sit in a chair in the middle of a room wearing virtual-reality goggles showing the view from a video camera placed behind them.

    A researcher moved a rod up to the camera at the same time as the person's chest was touched, and then the rod disappeared from view.

    This created the illusion that the person was sitting a few steps back, where the camera stood.

    In Blanke's experiment, subjects wearing virtual-reality goggles watched an image of a mannequin representing their own body placed directly in front of them while a researcher scratched their back.

    Afterwards, the volunteers were blindfolded and guided backwards. When they were asked to return to their original positions, they went toward the place where they had seen their virtual body -- the mannequin.

    The researchers said mixing up the senses of sight and touch was key to the experiments.

    "We tried to take two modalities -- sight and touch -- and systematically dissociate the information with those two senses, using virtual information to do this," Blanke said in a telephone interview. "It is a mismatch between the two senses."

    This type of experiment could help to shed light on philosophical questions surrounding the sense of self, and could also lead to more practical applications in video games or remote surgery, the researchers said.

    This could involve providing tactile information to a surgeon who is using video to control robot arms in a remote operating theatre, said Ehrsson, now at Sweden's Karolinska Institute.

    "In the best case it would be the whole self transported to the operating theatre," he said. "This experiment will help to improve things like that."



    More from Reuters

    Afghan suicide blast kills eight U.S. civilians

    KABUL (Reuters) - A suicide bomber killed eight American civilians in an attack at a military base in southeastern Afghanistan on Wednesday, one of the highest foreign civilian death tolls in an insurgent strike in the eight-year war.

    A computer screen image made using Millimeter Wave technology shows a person during a demonstration at the Transporation Security Administration (TSA) Systems Integration Facility in Washington, December 30, 2009. Credit: REUTERS/Jason Reed

    Body scans are Obama's call

    The Dutch are doing it. So what's taking the U.S. so long to make airport body scanners mandatory?  Full Article | Video 

    People walk past a branch of Bank of America in New York's financial district April 28, 2009. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid

    Move your money

    Boycotting "too big to fail" banks is a great idea -- so long as investors remember that banks aren't the only ones responsible for the crisis.  Full Article