Social exclusion in a virtual Cyberball game reduces the virtual hand illusion

Psychon Bull Rev. 2024 Apr 2. doi: 10.3758/s13423-024-02456-w. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Sense of ownership and agency are two important aspects of the minimal self, but how self-perception is affected by social conditions remains unclear. Here, we studied how social inclusion or exclusion of participants in the course of a virtual Cyberball game would affect explicit judgments and implicit measures of ownership and agency (proprioceptive drift, skin conductance responses, and intentional binding, respectively) in a virtual hand illusion paradigm, in which a virtual hand moved in or out of sync with the participants' own hand. Results show that synchrony affected all four measures. More importantly, this effect interacted with social inclusion/exclusion in the Cyberball game for both ownership and agency measure, showing that social exclusion reduces perceived agency and ownership.

Keywords: Intentional binding; Sense of agency; Sense of ownership; Social exclusion; Virtual hand illusion.