Body ownership is not affected in schizophrenia, yet, more work is needed to test important aspects of self-consciousness in schizophrenia.

‘When schizophrenia is active, symptoms can include delusions, hallucinations, trouble with thinking and concentration, and lack of motivation. However, when these symptoms are treated, most people with schizophrenia will greatly improve over time.’

The study was carried out by the lab of Michael Herzog at EPFL. Led by postdoc Albulena Shaqiri, the scientists tested 59 patients suffering from chronic schizophrenia, and compared to 30 healthy people. The patients undertook a well-established test called the "Full-Body Illusion", which has been developed by Olaf Blanke's lab at EPFL. 




The idea behind the Full-Body Illusion is to induce changes in body ownership through prolonged multisensory stimulation. In this study, participants had their backs stroked while watching their back being stroked on a virtual body using a virtual reality visor.
When both real and virtual stroking happen at the same time, the participants typically experienced a stronger sense of body ownership and identification with the virtual body, while they also felt drifting towards it. But when the strokes were not synchronized, the patients felt none of this.
The study found that the patients performed the same way as healthy controls in the Illusion, meaning that their sense of body ownership is unaffected by schizophrenia. "This has never been shown or reported before," says Albulena Shaqiri. "Up to now, it was believed that schizophrenia patients have a disturbed sense of body ownership".
"This finding gives us a more realistic understanding of deficits of the Self in schizophrenia, and may assist us in finding solutions to these problems," adds Roy Salomon from Bar-Illan University, and one of the study's lead authors.
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But until now, the question of body ownership has been left open. This is critical because agency and body ownership are the two main components of what we call the Self, and this is the area where schizophrenia manifests.
"This study suggests that body ownership is not affected in schizophrenia," says Olaf Blanke. "Yet, more work is needed to test important aspects of self-consciousness in schizophrenia, such as the many different forms of body ownership -- hand, torso, face -- their dependency on different multisensory stimuli, and their relation to sensorimotor aspects of self-consciousness such as agency."
Source-Eurekalert