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Asena Boyadzhieva

University of Vienna

1 paper in the library · 4 citations · publishing 2022

Papers

How Things Take Up Space: A Grounded Theory of Presence and Lived Space

The Qualitative Report November 20, 2022 Aleš Oblak, Asena Boyadzhieva, Jaya Caporusso et al. 4 citations

Presence—both as objecthood and immersion—is not captured by any single sense but emerges from all available sensory knowledge as a disembodied sense of solidity. Based on 117 phenomenological interviews with 14 participants sampled across positive (e.g., sexual intimacy) and negative (e.g., psychopathology) circumstances, a grounded theory analysis indicates that presence is a transmodal phenomenon, relatable to how aspects of experience translate between sensory modalities. Its relation to lived space helps explain delusion formation as rooted in sensory alterations rather than belief changes. That presence in lived space need not match objective reality informs debates on whether presence is an amodal aspect of consciousness.