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Gethin Hughes

Researcher at University of Essex

Publications -  35
Citations -  1496

Gethin Hughes is an academic researcher from University of Essex. The author has contributed to research in topics: Sensory system & Voluntary action. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 31 publications receiving 1283 citations. Previous affiliations of Gethin Hughes include Centre national de la recherche scientifique & University of Oxford.

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Mechanisms of intentional binding and sensory attenuation: The role of temporal prediction, temporal control, identity prediction, and motor prediction.

TL;DR: This review systematically investigated the role of temporal prediction, temporal control, identity prediction, and motor prediction in previous published reports of sensory attenuation and intentional binding, and assessed the degree to which existing data provide evidence for therole of forward action models in these phenomena.
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Action effect anticipation: Neurophysiological basis and functional consequences

TL;DR: By assuming that action preparation includes activation of the predicted sensory consequences of the action, this work provides a mechanism to understand sensory attenuation and intentional binding and proposes a possible neural basis for the processing of predicted action effects.
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ERP correlates of action effect prediction and visual sensory attenuation in voluntary action

TL;DR: It is found that attenuation of cortical responses to visual action effects was manifested in a reduced activation of a frontoparietal network, from 150 ms after stimulus, which may reflect the cortical correlates of the action effect prediction.
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Dissociable correlates of response conflict and error awareness in error-related brain activity

TL;DR: Findings suggest a dissociation between the ERN and the Pe, with the former reflecting the dynamics of response selection and conflict, and the latter reflecting conscious recognition of an error.
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Intentional binding is driven by the mere presence of an action and not by motor prediction

TL;DR: The results show that motor identity prediction does not modulate intentional binding of action-effects, and cast doubts on the assumption that intentionalbinding of action effects is linked to internal forward predictive process.