Woah, weird
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maybe a (little) bit less weird if you consider that the experiment has 4 discrete response options (hands and feet). But it is weird that people are convinced to feel it wherever they report.
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Interesting result! Keeping track of which limb is being touched, in what order and orientation from reading the descriptions though is mind-bending. The whole thing needs a line-by-line sidebar with diagrams. Also (maybe I missed it) I wonder about effects of stimulus intensity.
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I know, it‘s difficult to follow the effects. We hope Fig. 1 will help. We did not test stim intensity here - each subject was ~4hrs testing time as is. However, in an ongoing study, intensity has miniscule influence as compared to crossing.
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Cool! I would have expected stronger stimuli to significantly reduce the mis-attribution frequency. Go science!
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yes. It might in this paper’s paradigm. In the one where we tested it, we only use 2 locations. But there the eff was so small we stopped testing it.
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