Illusions have historically been used in experimental psychology to reveal information about perceptual processes. A recent study reported that participants felt a sense of body heaviness when given slightly delayed (incongruent) visual feedback compared with the predicted somatosensory feedback. In this study, we reported a novel illusion of feeling a sense of body lightness while walking. There is consensus that an important factor in a body’s perceptual process is congruency between the senses. When our 30 participants experienced “subjectively preceding feedback” while walking on a treadmill, nine of them felt a sense of body lightness. In this report, we discussed how we were able to generate the subjectively preceding feedback, the mechanism that induces the illusion of a sense of body lightness, and the potential applications of this illusion. Although this study was just a preliminary and exploratory research, this new illusion has the potential to contribute not only to the medical and rehabilitation fields but also to extended reality technology and other interdisciplinary fields.
Hayashida et al. (Thu,) studied this question.