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Carmen Weiss

Researcher at Max Planck Society

Publications -  9
Citations -  518

Carmen Weiss is an academic researcher from Max Planck Society. The author has contributed to research in topics: Perception & Action (philosophy). The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 9 publications receiving 453 citations. Previous affiliations of Carmen Weiss include Heidelberg University.

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The self in action effects: Selective attenuation of self-generated sounds

TL;DR: Compared the loudness perception of sounds that were either self-generated, generated by another person or a computer, and observed sensory effects, a reduced perception of loudness intensity specifically related to self-generation is found.
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Believing and perceiving: authorship belief modulates sensory attenuation.

TL;DR: The results suggest that sensory attenuation is also a consequence of prior belief about the causal link between an action and a sensory change in the environment.
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Roughness perception during the rubber hand illusion.

TL;DR: It is suggested that the RHI seems to be resistant to top-down knowledge in terms of a conceptual interpretation of tactile sensations, and the hypothesis that participants own hand tends to disappear during the illusion and that the rubber hand actively replaces it is argued against.
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The self in social interactions: sensory attenuation of auditory action effects is stronger in interactions with others.

TL;DR: Sensory attenuation of self- and other-generated sounds was increased in interactive as compared to the respective individual action contexts, the first experimental evidence suggesting that pre-reflective self-agency can extend to and is shaped by interactions between individuals.
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Agency in the sensorimotor system and its relation to explicit action awareness

TL;DR: Investigating whether the human motor system is indeed sensitive to whether observed actions are linked to agency or not showed that corticospinal excitability varied with the degree of temporal correspondence of the executed and observed movements, which suggests that explicit judgments of agency could be directly based on information within the sensorimotor system.