Trait dissociation is associated with dissociative experiences arising from disrupted multisensory integration Articles uri icon

authors

  • Moffatt, Jamie A.
  • ROEL LESUR, MARTE
  • LENGGENHAGER, BIGNA
  • Maglianella, Valerio
  • Critchley, Hugo
  • Garfinkel, Sarah N.
  • Greenwood, Kathryn

publication date

  • April 2025

start page

  • 1

end page

  • 17

issue

  • 15

International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)

  • 2045-2322

abstract

  • Dissociation is a transdiagnostic mental health symptom involving a sense of detachment from one's own body. A coherent percept of our body relies upon the smooth integration of different senses, such as vision and touch, which are processed by the brain at different speeds. We investigated the association between multi-sensory integration and dissociation in a N = 100 non-clinical sample. An immersive head-mounted display provided participants with a first-person view of their body while their arm was brushed by themselves or by the researcher. This mixed-reality setup allowed for the systematic variation of a delay to the visual feed, resulting in visual information being delayed relative to other senses (e.g. touch). Larger delays were associated with greater self-reported feelings of dis-ownership from the body. In addition, participants with high trait dissociation felt elevated sensations of dis-ownership from the body and were more sensitive to the multi-sensory delay, suggesting an increased tendency to 'fraction' senses in dissociation. Moreover, individuals with higher dissociation displayed similar cardiac reactivity to both self and other touch. These findings highlight two key mechanisms underlying dissociation; altered sensory-integration and increased awareness of self-action.

keywords

  • dissociation; multi-sensory integration; mixed reality; embodiment; interoception; self-action