Hallucinations are significant symptoms in psychiatric and neurodegenerative diseases, that may indicate advanced disease progression or worse disease forms. They are also frequent in healthy individuals, especially elderly or bereaved. Despite their relevance, studying hallucinations in controlled laboratory conditions remains challenging given the limited procedures inducing clinically relevant hallucinations. We have previously developed a robotics-based protocol capable of inducing a specific clinically relevant hallucination, presence hallucination (PH), in both healthy individuals and patients. Using this approach, we have systematically investigated the sensitivity and intensity of PH-induction, as well as its effects on various sensory, behavioral and cognitive aspects. In the present study, we pooled individual-participant data from 25 in-house experiments (totaling 561 individuals) and conducted a Bayesian analysis to estimate effects and moderators of PH-induction. PH-induction was reliably induced with a medium effect-size, and individuals with schizotypal traits were more sensitive. Furthermore, we identified that PH-induction may not strongly depend on altered agency, but found a synergistic relationship between passivity and induced PH. Collectively these results elucidate the role of somatomotor processes in aberrant own body perceptions, advance understanding of psychosis, and provide powerful statistical priors for future studies.