disowned their veridical body.
These findings go beyond previous studies (Ehrsson, 2007; Lenggenhager et al., 2007; Petkova & Ehrsson, 2008) in that they
provide objective evidence for disownership of the real body during the illusion and evidence for a shift in perceived selflocation
in the testing room with respect to environmental landmarks. The results demonstrate that ownership of a ‘new’
illusory body comes at the price of losing ownership of the real body. As a result, rather than experiencing ownership of
the real and the illusory body simultaneously, the out-of-body illusion involves an experience of one united self at the location
of the illusory body.