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Connecting action control and agency: Does action-effect binding affect temporal binding?

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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

This study explored the sense of agency and action control. Findings indicate that while action-effect bindings and temporal binding effects occur, they are not directly related, suggesting a dissociation in agency perception.

Keywords:
Action-effect bindingAgencyHuman action controlIdeomotor theoryTemporal binding

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Neuroscience
  • Psychology of Action

Background:

  • The sense of agency, the feeling of controlling one's actions and their outcomes, is fundamental to human volition.
  • Action-effect binding, the perceived link between an action and its consequence, influences explicit agency judgments.
  • Temporal binding, a perceptual bias where actions and their effects are perceived as closer in time, serves as an implicit measure of agency.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the relationship between action-effect bindings and temporal binding.
  • To determine if implicit measures of agency (temporal binding) are associated with explicit measures (action-effect binding).

Main Methods:

  • Two experiments were conducted to establish and measure both short-term action-effect bindings and temporal binding effects.
  • Participants' explicit and implicit judgments related to action control and agency were assessed.

Main Results:

  • Evidence was found for the establishment of both short-term action-effect bindings and temporal binding effects.
  • Crucially, these two phenomena (action-effect binding and temporal binding) were not found to be associated with each other.

Conclusions:

  • The relationship between action control mechanisms and the subjective sense of agency is complex.
  • These findings support a dissociation between subjective agency and perceptual biases like temporal binding, challenging simple models of agency.