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Chlöé Farrer

Researcher at University of Toulouse

Publications -  26
Citations -  3749

Chlöé Farrer is an academic researcher from University of Toulouse. The author has contributed to research in topics: Sense of agency & Cognition. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 25 publications receiving 3474 citations. Previous affiliations of Chlöé Farrer include Dartmouth College & Pierre-and-Marie-Curie University.

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Experiencing oneself vs another person as being the cause of an action: the neural correlates of the experience of agency.

TL;DR: It is suggested that the anterior insula is concerned with the integration of all the concordant multimodal sensory signals associated with voluntary movements, and the inferior parietal cortex represents movements in an allocentric coding system that can be applied to the actions of others as well as the self.
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Modulating the experience of agency: a positron emission tomography study.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the level of activity of specific brain areas maps onto the experience of causing or controlling an action, particularly in the inferior part of the parietal lobe.
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Defective recognition of one's own actions in patients with schizophrenia.

TL;DR: The findings support the hypothesis that delusions of influence are associated with a quantifiable difficulty in correct self-attribution of actions and may be related to a specific impairment of a neural action attribution system.
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Actions or hand-object interactions? Human inferior frontal cortex and action observation.

TL;DR: Fast, event-related fMRI was used to address the question of whether cells in macaque ventral premotor cortex respond to observation or production of specific hand-object interactions in response to realized goals of observed prehensile actions.
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The Angular Gyrus Computes Action Awareness Representations

TL;DR: It is shown that right Ag is associated with both awareness of discrepancy between intended and movement consequences and awareness of action authorship, and it is proposed that this region is involved in higher-order aspects of motor control that allows one to consciously access different aspects of one's own actions.