Cover Image: July 2011 Scientific American Magazine See Inside

The Third-Hand Illusion

Could you use an extra hand? The brain's body plan might not be limited to two arms














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The brain usually has a pretty good idea of what is part of the body and what is not—although the classic rubber hand illusion can convince people to adopt a fake hand as their own when one of their real hands is hidden from view. Researchers at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm have added a strange new twist to this experiment, persuading volunteers to believe that they have three hands rather than two.

The psychologists accomplished this sensory legerdemain by placing a false rubber right hand next to the subject’s real right hand and covering both with a cloth from the wrist up (to obscure which one was connected to the body). With the left hand also in view, an experimenter stroked each right hand in parallel with a small brush—a technique that tricks the brain into “feeling” the touch on the fake hand. The experimenter then swiftly picked up a kitchen knife and swiped it toward one of the right hands.

Participants reacted with a flash of fear regardless of whether the knife was plunging toward the real or rubber right hand, indicating that the brain had started to think of the false hand as part of the body, too.

The findings, which were published online February 23 in PLoS ONE, sug­gest that the nervous system—and a lifetime of experience—may not in fact hardwire our somatosensory cortex to expect and accommodate just two arms. The brain might be far more flexible in what it can perceive as part of the body. This discovery could one day help create operational pros­thetics for paralyzed stroke patients or people who could just use an extra hand on the job.

The mind is not entirely dupable, though. Exchange the false right hand for a left hand—or a prosthetic foot—and the brain does not buy it. No amount of brushstroking or knife waving could trick subjects into sweating that a chest-level foot was about to lose a toe.


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  1. 1. David N'Gog 10:29 AM 7/7/11

    I'm sure the more unbelievable the appendage the longer it would take to trick the brain. I'd be interested to see an experiment that tested such a hypothesis.

    Certainly anyone who has ever worn a watch or a wedding ring will know how at first it feels quite alien- but over time it becomes to seem like part of your body. There is definately a feeling of part of you missing when it is absent.

    I suspect a rubber elephants' trunk attached to your torso would feel naturally part of your body given time.

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  2. 2. Grumpyoleman 05:31 PM 7/11/11

    The need to carry a carry on bag, a computer, and one's boarding pass and passport will drive evolution to select for a 3rd arm and hand.

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  3. 3. tommyoctober 06:01 PM 7/11/11

    Interesting and I've seen similar experiments with the mirror box with amputees and post-CVA patients. You wonder in this experiment, however, if the fear of the knife wound in either of the right hands could be explained by the use of mirror neurons ---reacting to an assault agains "us" or "non-us?"

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  4. 4. tadatma 04:25 AM 8/12/11

    Well, doesn't everyone get that feeling while driving any vehicle?

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