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This study reveals that how well we link actions to their immediate effects predicts our sense of agency. This finding adds a new mechanism to understanding how we perceive control over our actions.

Keywords:
Action controlAction-effect bindingAgencyIdeomotor theory

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Neuroscience
  • Psychology of Action
  • Human Sensorimotor Control

Background:

  • The sense of agency, the feeling of controlling one's actions and their consequences, is fundamental to conscious experience.
  • Existing theories explain agency through predictive (forward models) and postdictive (retrospective judgments) processes.
  • The link between basic action control mechanisms and the sense of agency is an emerging area of research.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the relationship between short-term action-effect binding and explicit judgments of agency.
  • To explore whether basic sensorimotor processes contribute to the formation of the sense of agency.

Main Methods:

  • Participants performed actions and their effects were manipulated.
  • Measured the degree of short-term action-effect binding.
  • Assessed participants' explicit agency ratings following the action-effect experience.

Main Results:

  • A significant positive correlation was found between short-term action-effect binding and subsequent agency ratings.
  • The degree of immediate action-effect linkage predicted how strongly participants felt they controlled the outcome.

Conclusions:

  • Short-term action-effect binding serves as a crucial mechanism in the formation of the sense of agency.
  • This finding complements existing predictive and postdictive models, offering a more comprehensive understanding of agency.
  • Highlights the role of basic action control in subjective experiences of agency.