RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 A common perceptual inference for cross-modally induced illusions of body schema JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 066159 DO 10.1101/066159 A1 Zane Z. Zheng A1 Kevin G. Munhall A1 Ingrid S. Johnsrude YR 2016 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2016/07/27/066159.abstract AB Body-schema, or the multimodal representation of one’s own body attributes, has been demonstrated previously to be malleable. In the rubber-hand illusion (Botvinick & Cohen, 1998), synchronous visual and tactile stimulation cause a fake hand to be perceived as one’s own. Similarly, if a stranger’s voice is heard synchronously with one’s own vocal production, that voice comes to be attributed to oneself (Zheng et al., 2011). Multimodal illusions like these involve distorting body schema based on correlated input, yet the degree to which different instances of distortion are perceived within the same individuals has never been examined. Here we show that participants embraced the ownership of a fake hand and a stranger’s voice to a similar degree, controlling both for individual suggestibility and for general susceptibility to illusion of body schema. Our findings suggest that the perceptual inference that leads to the distortion of body schema is a stable trait.