7 November 2025 - 7 November 2025
1:00PM - 2:00PM
L68, Psychology building
Free
The feeling that the body belongs to oneself (i.e., sense of body ownership) is the result of sophisticated processes of multisensory integration, whereby exteroceptive, proprioceptive, and interoceptive signals are continuously combined. Illusions of body ownership, such as the Rubber Hand Illusion (RHI), can provide some insight into the interplay between vision, proprioception, and touch. In this talk, I will present a series of studies investigating the contribution of skin-mediates signals, such as touch and temperature, to the perception of a body part as belonging to ourselves. Our results will also be discussed in the context of experimental data with clinical populations. Taken together, our data suggest that skin-mediated interoception signals may make a unique contribution to the sense of body ownership, and by implication to our embodied psychological ‘self’.
Lecturer, Queen Mary University
Dr Crucianelli's research focuses on the perception of (affective) touch and temperature, multisensory integration, interoception, and sense of body ownership in both healthy and clinical populations. She is also the Secretary of the European Society for Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience (ESCAN) and the co-chair of the Women in Higher Education Network (WHEN) at Queen Mary University of London.