Subliminal action priming modulates the perceived intensity of sensory action consequences.
Max-Philipp Stenner,Markus Bauer,Nura Sidarus,Hans-Jochen Heinze,Patrick Haggard,Raymond J. Dolan +5 more
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TLDR
Subliminal motor priming is used to test for the predicted motor locus of the attenuated perceived intensity of an action-outcome by compatible priming, which is known to enhance explicit agency judgements.About:
This article is published in Cognition.The article was published on 2014-02-01 and is currently open access. It has received 36 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Subliminal stimuli & Stimulus (physiology).read more
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Do Implicit and Explicit Measures of the Sense of Agency Measure the Same Thing
John A. Dewey,Günther Knoblich +1 more
TL;DR: Surprisingly the two implicit measures of SoA were not significantly correlated with each other, nor did they correlate with the explicit measures of soA.
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From action intentions to action effects: how does the sense of agency come about?
TL;DR: Several classes of behavioral and neuroimaging data are reviewed suggesting that earlier processes, linked to fluency of action selection, prospectively contribute to sense of agency, having important implications for better understanding human volition and abnormalities of action experience.
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The Sense of Agency during Continuous Action: Performance Is More Important than Action-Feedback Association
TL;DR: It was concluded that, when the action-feedback association was uncertain, cognitive inference was more dominant relative to the process of comparing predicted and perceived information in the judgment of agency.
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Sensory suppression of brain responses to self-generated sounds is observed with and without the perception of agency
TL;DR: Recorded event-related potentials in response to sounds initiated by button presses suggest that suppression of the auditory N1 component to self-generated sounds does not depend on adaptation to specific action-effect time delays, and does not determine agency judgments, however, the suppression ofthe P2 component might relate more directly to the experience of agency.
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TMS stimulation over the inferior parietal cortex disrupts prospective sense of agency
TL;DR: This work showed that TMS over left IPC at the time of action selection disrupts perceived control over subsequent effects of action, and exploited the temporal specificity of single-pulse TMS to pinpoint the exact timing of IPC contribution to sense of agency.
References
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Signal detection theory and psychophysics
David M. Green,John A. Swets +1 more
TL;DR: This book discusses statistical decision theory and sensory processes in signal detection theory and psychophysics and describes how these processes affect decision-making.
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TL;DR: This book discusses Detection and Discrimination of Compound Stimuli: Tools for Multidimensional Detection Theory and Multi-Interval Discrimination Designs and Adaptive Methods for Estimating Empirical Thresholds.
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Forward models for physiological motor control
R. C. Miall,Daniel M. Wolpert +1 more
TL;DR: The uses of such internal models for solving several fundamental computational problems in motor control are outlined and the evidence for their existence and use by the central nervous system is reviewed.
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Computational principles of movement neuroscience
TL;DR: This goal is to demonstrate how specific models emerging from the computational approach provide a theoretical framework for movement neuroscience.