Roy Salomon

Roy Salomon
  • BA. ,MSc , PhD.
  • Professor (Full) at University of Haifa

About

123
Publications
31,063
Reads
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3,512
Citations
Introduction
My lab (www.salomonlab.org) is currently studying how the brain models the self and the world. The aim is to understand how the Self is built from multisensory information and action and how this impacts high level cognitive processes. You can see all our papers here https://salomonlab.org/publications/
Current institution
University of Haifa
Current position
  • Professor (Full)
Additional affiliations
October 2016 - July 2017
Bar Ilan University
Position
  • Lecturer
January 2016 - present
University of Geneva
Position
  • Lecturer
January 2011 - June 2015
Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne
Position
  • PostDoc Position
Education
March 2005 - December 2010
Tel Aviv University
Field of study
  • Cognitive Neuroscience
September 2003 - December 2004
Tel Aviv University
Field of study
  • Cognitive Psychology
September 1999 - September 2001
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Field of study
  • Psychology

Publications

Publications (123)
Article
Full-text available
Unlabelled: The processing of interoceptive signals in the insular cortex is thought to underlie self-awareness. However, the influence of interoception on visual awareness and the role of the insular cortex in this process remain unclear. Here, we show in a series of experiments that the relative timing of visual stimuli with respect to the heart...
Article
Full-text available
Significance Processing of spatial, temporal, and social relations relies on mental cognitive maps, on which the behaving self is oriented relative to different places, events, and people. Using high-resolution functional MRI scanning in individual subjects, we show that mental orientation in space, time, and person produces a sequential posterior–...
Article
Full-text available
The problem of the self has captivated philosophers and psychologists for centuries. While the self is clearly a central facet of the human psyche, to date we have a limited understanding of the cognitive and neural mechanisms underlying this construct. The fundamental, pre-reflexive level of self-representation, often termed the minimal self has b...
Article
Full-text available
Over the last 30 years, our understanding of the neurocognitive bases of consciousness has improved, mostly through studies employing vision. While studying consciousness in the visual modality presents clear advantages, we believe that a comprehensive scientific account of subjective experience must not neglect other exteroceptive and interoceptiv...
Article
Recent studies have highlighted the role of multisensory integration as a key mechanism of self-consciousness. In particular, integration of bodily signals within the peripersonal space (PPS) underlies the experience of the self in a body we own (self-identification) and that is experienced as occupying a specific location in space (self-location),...
Preprint
An intriguing aspect of the human mind is our knowledge that our perceptions may be false. Our frequent exposure to non-veridical perceptions such as those found in dreams, illusions and hallucinations cause us to examine the actuality of our sensory experiences. As such humans continuously monitor the veridicality of their perceptions in a process...
Preprint
Objective: Trauma exposure may lead to posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in a subset of vulnerable individuals. Circadian rhythm disruptions have emerged as both risk factors and consequences of PTSD. Whether circadian disruptions in trauma aftermath predict future PTSD risk, and if so, what behavioral and physiological indices of circadian disr...
Preprint
Full-text available
The eyes are considered a ‘window’ into the mind, shedding light on the cognitive processes leading to explicit decisions. Yet, eye movements are also a distinct oculomotor decision that is the outcome of an independent cognitive system. When exploring novel environments, the convergence and divergence of gaze and explicit decisions highlights the...
Preprint
Full-text available
The scope of unconscious processing has long been, and still remains, a hotly debated issue. This is driven in part by the current diversity of methods to manipulate and measure perceptual consciousness. We report 10 recommendations from a group of researchers representing a range of theoretical backgrounds, on how to design, analyze, and report th...
Preprint
Full-text available
Traumatic events (TEs) play a causal role in the etiology of psychopathologies such as depression and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Recent research has highlighted the therapeutic potential of psychoactive substances and especially 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA), in alleviating trauma symptoms in chronic patients. However, little...
Article
Full-text available
The sense of self is a foundational element of neurotypical human consciousness. We normally experience the world as embodied agents, with the unified sensation of our selfhood being nested in our body. Critically, the sense of self can be altered in psychiatric conditions such as psychosis and altered states of consciousness induced by psychedelic...
Article
Full-text available
Infant stimuli elicit widespread neural and behavioral response in human adults and such massive allocation of resources attests to the evolutionary significance of the primary attachment. Here, we examined whether attachment reminders also trigger cross-brain concordance and generate greater neural uniformity, as indicated by inter-subject correla...
Article
Full-text available
Classic Bayesian models of perceptual inference describe how an ideal observer would integrate ‘unisensory’ measurements (multisensory integration) and attribute sensory signals to their origin(s) (causal inference). However, in the brain, sensory signals are always received in the context of a multisensory bodily state—namely, in combination with...
Article
The experience of the self as an embodied agent in the world is an essential aspect of human consciousness. This experience arises from the feeling of control over one's bodily actions, termed the Sense of Agency, and the feeling that the body belongs to the self, Body Ownership. Despite long-standing philosophical and scientific interest in the re...
Article
Full-text available
We introduce ChillsDB the first validated database of audiovisual stimuli eliciting aesthetic chills (goosebumps, psychogenic shivers) in a US population. To discover chills stimuli “in the wild”, we devised a bottom-up, ecologically-valid method consisting in searching for mentions of the emotion’ somatic markers in user comments throughout social...
Preprint
The sense of self is a foundational element of neurotypical human consciousness. We normally experience the world as embodied agents, with the unified sensation of our selfhood being nested in our body. Critically, the sense of self can be altered in psychiatric conditions such as psychosis and altered states of consciousness induced by psychedelic...
Article
Full-text available
Aesthetic chills are an embodied peak emotional experience induced by stimuli such as music, films, and speeches and characterized by dopaminergic release. The emotional consequences of chills in terms of valence and arousal are still debated and the existing empirical data is conflicting. In this study, we tested the effects of ChillsDB, an open-s...
Preprint
Full-text available
Infant stimuli elicit widespread neural and behavioral response in human adults and such massive allocation of resources attests to the evolutionary significance of the primary attachment. Here, we examined whether attachment-related cues also trigger cross-brain concordance, generating greater neural uniformity among individuals. Post-partum mothe...
Preprint
Full-text available
Interoception—the perception of internal bodily signals—has recently emerged as an area of significant interest due to its potential implications in emotion and the prevalence of dysfunctional interoceptive processes across psychopathological conditions. Despite the importance of interoception in cognitive neuroscience and psychiatry, its experimen...
Article
Full-text available
A target question for the scientific study of consciousness is how dimensions of consciousness, such as the ability to feel pain and pleasure or reflect on one’s own experience, vary in different states and animal species. Considering the tight link between consciousness and moral status, answers to these questions have implications for law and eth...
Preprint
The experience of the self as an embodied agent in the world is an essential aspect of human consciousness. This experience arises from the feeling of control over one's bodily actions, termed the Sense of Agency (SoA), and the feeling that the body belongs to the self, Body Ownership (BO). Despite long-standing philosophical and scientific interes...
Preprint
Full-text available
Chills are a peak emotional experience induced by stimuli such as music, films, and speeches. The emotional consequences of chills in terms of valence and arousal are still debated and the existing empirical data is conflicting. In this study, we tested the effects of ChillsDB, an open-source repository of chills-inducing stimuli, on the emotional...
Preprint
Full-text available
We introduce ChillsDB, the first validated database of audiovisual stimuli eliciting aesthetic chills (goosebumps, psychogenic shivers) in a US population. To discover chills stimuli “in the wild”, we devised a bottom-up, ecologically-valid method consisting in searching for mentions of the emotion's somatic markers in user comments throughout soci...
Article
Full-text available
The Sense of Agency (SoA), our sensation of control over our actions, is a fundamental mechanism for delineating the Self from the environment and others. SoA arises from implicit processing of sensorimotor signals as well as explicit higher-level judgments. Psychosis patients suffer from difficulties in the sense of control over their actions and...
Article
The feeling of control over one’s actions, termed the Sense of Agency (SoA), delineates one’s experience as an embodied self. Although, this embodied experience is typically perceived as stable over time, recent theoretical accounts highlight the experience-dependent and dynamic nature of the embodied self. In this study we examined how recent expe...
Article
Full-text available
Acting in the world is accompanied by a sense of agency, or experience of control over our actions and their outcomes. As humans, we can report on this experience through judgments of agency. These judgments often occur under noisy conditions. We examined the computations underlying judgments of agency, in particular under the influence of sensory...
Article
Full-text available
Schizophrenia is a chronic and disabling mental illness characterized by a disordered sense of self. Current theories suggest that deficiencies in the sense of control over one’s actions (Sense of Agency, SoA) may underlie some of the symptoms of schizophrenia. However, it is not clear if agency deficits are a precursor or a result of psychosis. He...
Article
Full-text available
Attachment theory is built on the assumption of consistency; the mother-infant bond is thought to underpin the life-long representations individuals construct of attachment relationships. Still, consistency in the individual’s neural response to attachment-related stimuli representing his or her entire relational history has not been investigated....
Preprint
Full-text available
Normative decisions about moral status are strongly coupled with beliefs and assumptions about consciousness. Whether an individual is able to experience their environment, feel pain and pleasure or reflect on their own experiences, have all been judged at some point as relevant to the moral question of whether they should be protected by law. The...
Article
Full-text available
In order to interact seamlessly with robots, users must infer the causes of a robot’s behavior–and be confident about that inference (and its predictions). Hence, trust is a necessary condition for human-robot collaboration (HRC). However, and despite its crucial role, it is still largely unknown how trust emerges, develops, and supports human rela...
Preprint
Full-text available
The Sense of Agency (SoA), our sensation of control over our actions, is a fundamental mechanism for delineating the Self from the environment and others. SoA arises from implicit processing of sensorimotor signals as well as explicit higher-level judgments. Psychosis patients suffer from difficulties in the sense of control over their actions and...
Preprint
Full-text available
The feeling of control over one’s actions, termed the Sense of Agency (SoA), delineates one’s experience as an embodied self. Although, this embodied experience is typically perceived as stable over time, recent theoretical accounts highlight the experience-dependent and dynamic nature of the embodied self. In this study we examined how recent expe...
Preprint
Full-text available
Judgments of agency, our sense of control over our actions and the environment, are often assumed to be metacognitive. We examined this assumption at the computational level by comparing the effects of sensory noise on agency judgments to those on confidence judgements, which are widely accepted to be metacognitive in nature. In two tasks, particip...
Preprint
Full-text available
To interact seamlessly with robots, users must infer the causes of a robot's behavior and be confident about that inference. Hence, trust is a necessary condition for human-robot collaboration (HRC). Despite its crucial role, it is largely unknown how trust emerges, develops, and supports human interactions with nonhuman artefacts. Here, we review...
Article
Full-text available
Significance A birth-to-adulthood study tested the effects of maternal–newborn contact and synchronous caregiving on the social processing brain in human adults. For two decades, we followed preterm and full-term neonates, who received or lacked initial maternal bodily contact, repeatedly observing mother–child social synchrony. We measured the bra...
Article
Full-text available
Psychosis, characterized by hallucinations and delusions, is a common feature of psychiatric disease, especially schizophrenia. One prominent theory posits that psychosis is driven by abnormal sensorimotor predictions leading to the misattribution of self-related events. This misattribution has been linked to passivity experiences (PE), such as los...
Article
Full-text available
Reorganization of the maternal brain upon childbirth triggers species-typical maternal social behavior. These brief social moments carry profound effects on the infant's brain and likely have distinct signature in the maternal brain. Utilizing a double-blind, within-subject oxytocin/placebo administration crossover design, mothers' brain was imaged...
Article
Full-text available
The full body illusion (FBI) is a bodily illusion based on the application of multisensory conflicts inducing changes in bodily self-consciousness (BSC), which has been used to study cognitive brain mechanisms underlying body ownership and related aspects of self-consciousness. Typically, such paradigms have employed external passive multisensory s...
Preprint
Full-text available
Investigations into the neural underpinnings of the “self” highlight its complexity and multi-dimensionality and emphasize that various aspects of the self are sustained by different neural systems. Here, we focused on the Relational Self, a dimension denoting the self-within-attachment-relationships that taps the continuity of attachment across in...
Article
Recent advances in technology have enabled the creation of immersive digital environments commonly known as Virtual Reality (VR). The current study explored the potential of artistic creation in VR for art therapy (VRAT) from the perspective of expert art therapists. Seven expert art therapists participated in this study, all of whom experimented w...
Article
Full-text available
Thought insertion (TI) is characterized by the experience that certain thoughts, occurring in one’s mind, are not one’s own, but the thoughts of somebody else and suggestive of a psychotic disorder. We report a robotics-based method able to investigate the behavioural and subjective mechanisms of TI in healthy participants. We used a robotic device...
Article
Full-text available
The bodily-self, our experience of being a body, arises from the interaction of several processes. For example, embodied Sense of Agency (SoA), the feeling of controlling our body's actions, is a fundamental facet of the bodily-self. SoA is disturbed in psychosis, with stress promoting its inception. However, there is little knowledge regarding the...
Preprint
Full-text available
Reorganization of the maternal brain, primed by oxytocin surge during childbirth, triggers the species-typical maternal social behavior. These brief social moments carry profound effects on the infant's social brain and likely have a distinct signature in the maternal brain. Utilizing a double-blind, oxytocin/placebo administration crossover design...
Article
Full-text available
Distortions of reality, such as hallucinations, are common symptoms of many psychiatric conditions. Accordingly, sense of reality (SoR), the ability to discriminate between true and false perceptions, is a central criterion in the assessment of neurological and psychiatric health. Despite the critical role of the SoR in daily life, little is known...
Article
Full-text available
Background Despite attempts to predict which clinical high risk (CHR) individuals will convert to schizophrenia (SCZ), current neurocognitive tests have yielded only modest results. Stress plays a pivotal role in the inception of psychotic symptoms. Accordingly, we have recently speculated that modest predictive success may be an outcome of the dis...
Preprint
Full-text available
Mammalian young are born with immature brains and rely on the mother's body and caregiving behavior for maturation of neurobiological systems that sustain adult sociality. However, the parent-child precursors of humans' social brain are unknown. We followed human neonates, who received or were deprived of maternal bodily contact, to adulthood, repe...
Article
Dysfunction of sensorimotor predictive processing is thought to underlie abnormalities in self-monitoring producing passivity symptoms in psychosis. Experimentally induced sensorimotor conflict can produce a failure in bodily self-monitoring (presence hallucination [PH]), yet it is unclear how this is related to auditory self-monitoring and psychos...
Article
While sensorimotor signals are known to modulate perception, little is known about their influence on higher-level cognitive processes. Here, we applied sensorimotor conflicts while participants performed a perceptual task followed by confidence judgments. Results showed that sensorimotor conflicts altered metacognitive monitoring by decreasing met...
Article
Full-text available
Neurotechnology attempts to develop supernumerary limbs, but can the human brain deal with the complexity to control an extra limb and yield advantages from it? Here, we analyzed the neuromechanics and manipulation abilities of two polydactyly subjects who each possess six fingers on their hands. Anatomical MRI of the supernumerary finger (SF) reve...
Article
Full-text available
Background Psychosis is often depicted as a disruption of the self-model. Patients suffering from psychosis report many symptoms relating to deficiencies in the minimal self, including loss of the sense of control over their actions (Sense of Agency) as well as numerous disturbances of body representation (e.g. Body Ownership). Positive symptoms of...
Article
Full-text available
The sense of agency (SoA) is the sensation of control over our actions. SoA is thought to rely mainly upon the comparison of predictions regarding the sensory outcomes of one's actions and the actual sensory outcomes. Previous studies have shown that when a discrepancy is introduced between one's actions and the sensory feedback, the reported SoA i...
Preprint
Full-text available
Bodily self-consciousness is defined as a set of prereflective representations of integrated bodily signals giving rise to self-identification, self-location and first-person perspective. While bodily self-consciousness is known to modulate perception, little is known about its influence on higher-level cognitive processes. Here, we manipulated bod...
Article
Full-text available
In recent years, the field of virtual reality (VR) has shown tremendous advancements and is utilized in entertainment, scientific research, social networks, artistic creation, as well as numerous approaches to employ VR for psychotherapy. While the use of VR in psychotherapy has been widely discussed, little attention has been given to the potentia...
Data
Variations of virtual reality backgrounds.
Data
Flexibility of the creative medium.
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Virtual potential space / Dream like state.
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Art creation engaging full body movements.
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First person perspective (1pp) <– –> Third person perspective (3PP).
Data
Step inside your creation.
Data
Dynamic spatial rescaling in VR.
Article
Full-text available
This study explores the extent to which individuals embodied in Virtual Reality tend to self-attribute the movements of their avatar. More specifically, we tested subjects performing goal-directed movements and distorted the mapping between user and avatar movements by decreasing or increasing the amplitude of the avatar hand movement required to r...
Article
Full-text available
Empirical research on the bodily self has shown that the body representation is malleable, and prone to manipulation when conflicting sensory stimuli are presented. Using Virtual Reality (VR) we assessed the effects of manipulating multisensory feedback (full body control and visuo-tactile congruence) and visual perspective (first and third person...
Data
Example of the GSR signal of a complete session. (PDF)
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Overview of the experimental setup and conditions. (MP4)
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Session protocol. Video used to instruct the subject about the stages of a session. (MP4)
Data
Reported sense of self-location at different levels of perspective and perspective order factors. (PDF)
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Summary of results: Mean and confidence interval per experimental condition. (PDF)
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Performance comparison of the reaching task (VMT group only). (PDF)
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Summary of statistical tests results and their respective effect size estimations. (PDF)
Data
Data sets obtained with this experiment. (ZIP)
Article
Full-text available
Neuroprosthetics research in amputee patients aims at developing new prostheses that move and feel like real limbs. Targeted muscle and sensory reinnervation (TMSR) is such an approach and consists of rerouting motor and sensory nerves from the residual limb towards intact muscles and skin regions. Movement of the myoelectric prosthesis is enabled...
Article
Schizophrenia is a severe psychiatric disorder, in which patients experience an abnormal sense of self. While deficits in sensorimotor self-representation (agency) are well documented in schizophrenia, less is known about other aspects of bodily self-representation (body ownership). Here, we tested a large cohort (N = 59) of chronic schizophrenia p...
Article
Recent research has shown that heartbeat-evoked potentials (HEPs), brain activity in response to heartbeats, are a useful neural measure for investigating the functional role of brain-body interactions in cognitive processes including self-consciousness. In 2 experiments, using intracranial electroencephalography (EEG), we investigated (1) the neur...
Article
Exteroceptive bodily signals (including tactile, proprioceptive, and visual signals) are important information contributing to self-consciousness. Moreover, prominent theories proposed that visceral signals about internal bodily states are equally or even more important. Neuroimaging studies have described several brain regions which process signal...
Article
Full-text available
The construct of the “self” is conceived as being fundamental in promoting survival. As such, extensive studies have documented preferential processing of self-relevant stimuli. For example, attributes that relate to the self are better encoded and retrieved, and are more readily consciously perceived. The preferential processing of self-relevant i...
Article
Vision is known to be shaped by context, defined by environmental and bodily signals. In the Taylor illusion, the size of an afterimage projected on one's hand changes according to proprioceptive signals conveying hand position. Here, we assessed whether the Taylor illusion does not just depend on the physical hand position, but also on bodily self...
Article
Full-text available
Significance statement: Vision is influenced by the body: in the Taylor illusion, the size of an afterimage projected on one's hand changes according to tactile and proprioceptive signals conveying hand position. Here, we report a new phenomenon revealing that the perception of afterimages depends not only on bodily signals, but also on the sense...
Article
Unlabelled: Recent research has investigated self-consciousness associated with the multisensory processing of bodily signals (e.g., somatosensory, visual, vestibular signals), a notion referred to as bodily self-consciousness, and these studies have shown that the manipulation of bodily inputs induces changes in bodily self-consciousness such as...
Article
Full-text available
The two-thirds power law describes the relationship between velocity and curvature in human motor movements. Interestingly, this motor law also affects visual motion perception, in which stimuli moving according to the two-thirds power law are perceived to have a constant velocity compared to stimuli actually moving at constant velocity. Thus, visu...
Chapter
Full-text available
Recent neuroscience research emphasizes the embodied origins of the experience of the self. This chapter shows that further advances in the understanding of the phenomenon of VR-induced presence might be achieved in connection with advances in the understanding of the brain mechanisms of bodily self-consciousness. By reviewing the neural mechanisms...
Article
Full-text available
Experimentally induced sensorimotor conflicts can result in a loss of the feeling of control over a movement (sense of agency). These findings are typically interpreted in terms of a forward model in which the predicted sensory consequences of the movement are compared with the observed sensory consequences. In the present study we investigated whe...
Preprint
Recent studies have highlighted the role of multisensory integration as a key mechanism of self-consciousness. In particular, integration of bodily signals within the peripersonal space (PPS) underlies the experience of the self in a body we own (self-identification) and that is experienced as occupying a specific location in space (self-location),...
Article
Full-text available
Experimental manipulations of body ownership have indicated that multisensory integration is central to forming bodily self-representation. Voluntary self-touch is a unique multisensory situation involving corresponding motor, tactile and proprioceptive signals. Yet, even though self-touch is frequent in everyday life, its contribution to the forma...
Article
Although the interaction between vision and touch is of crucial importance for perceptual and bodily self-consciousness, only little is known regarding the link between conscious access and tactile processing. Here, we tested whether the numerical encoding of tactile stimuli depends on conscious discrimination. On each trial, participants received...
Article
In recent years, consciousness has become a central topic in cognitive neuroscience. This review focuses on the relation between bodily self-consciousness - the feeling of being a subject in a body - and visual consciousness - the subjective experience associated with the perception of visual signals. Findings from clinical and experimental work ha...
Article
Full-text available
Tales of ghosts, wraiths, and other apparitions have been reported in virtually all cultures. The strange sensation that somebody is nearby when no one is actually present and cannot be seen (feeling of a presence, FoP) is a fascinating feat of the human mind, and this apparition is often covered in the literature of divinity, occultism, and fictio...
Article
Full-text available
The global signal is commonly removed from resting-state data, since it was presumed to reflect physiological noise. However, removal of the global signal is now under debate as this signal may reflect important neuronal components, and its removal may introduce artifacts into the data. Here we show that the functional-connectivity of the global si...

Questions

Questions (10)
Question
Writing up a null effect paper and would like to add a p curve analysis on the few previous works on this topic (~6) as additional evidence. This seems very underpowered to me, but is it legitimate?
thx
Roy
Question
Any recommendations for robust EEG and physiological (ecg) for participants who are moving?
I have heard that the gtec nautilus is one option. Any others out there/ 
thx
Question
I'm looking ofr papers on the visual salience of biological motion when it is task irrelevant. any suggestions or tips very welcome.
thanks
Roy
Question
I am looking for a study which has investigated the relative visual salience of stimuli moving with different levels of variance in their velocity.  Thanks
Roy
Question
This system should be compatible with SCR monitoring of the pain responses, only low level of pain induction is required. 
Question
I would like to show this to people outside the field to demonstrate what happen when body representations are altered. Preferably in English. Thank you
Question
Hey, does anyone know of papers or experiments relating to different cortical layers in the precuneus/ pcc region. Especially relating to the role of this region in self related processing?
Question
Action and perception interactions are being studied extensively however I have not been able to find experiments which test in a single paradigm both action perception and perception to action influences.
Question
I am using luminance equated color stimuli using the standard RGB equation Lum=R*0.299+G*0.587+B*0.114. However, my pilot study shows that the resulting colors are not equally salient. Does anyone have any suggestions? If anyone has good color pairs which have been tested to be equally salient and can send a citation that would be perfect.

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