Literature DB >> 16934490

Intention, attention and the temporal experience of action.

Patrick Haggard1, Jonathan Cole.   

Abstract

Subjects estimated the time of intentions to perform an action, of the action itself, or of an auditory effect of the action. A perceptual attraction or binding effect occurred between actions and the effects that followed them. Judgements of intentions did not show this binding, suggesting they are represented independently of actions and their effects. In additional unpredictable judgement conditions, subjects were instructed only after each trial which of these events to judge, thus discouraging focussed attention to a specific event. Stronger binding effects were found, with intention, action and effect fusing to a single central point in time. In a control task, subjects reported the time of the first or second tone in sequence. Tone sequences showed no binding at all when subjects knew in advance which tone to judge, but showed the same fusion as actions when the event to be judged was not predictable. Binding of actions and effects, but not of tone sequences, occurs pre-attentively, and automatically. The data are consistent with a reconstructive process, implemented after actions, which generates a coherent sense of agency. However, this process should only be triggered only when our actions make it appropriate. We suggest that this mechanism is triggered in advance by efferent processing. This conclusion was supported by a further study in deafferented subject IW. This subject showed the normal binding of a tone towards an action, although his experience of the action was of pre-motor, rather than peripheral origin. The experience of intentional action involves an interplay between pre-motor and reconstructive processes.

Mesh:

Year:  2006        PMID: 16934490     DOI: 10.1016/j.concog.2006.07.002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Conscious Cogn        ISSN: 1053-8100


  18 in total

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2.  Sense of agency and intentional binding in joint action.

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5.  Time perception and the experience of agency.

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6.  Time in action contexts: learning when an action effect occurs.

Authors:  Carola Haering; Andrea Kiesel
Journal:  Psychol Res       Date:  2011-05-17

Review 7.  The implicit sense of agency is not a perceptual effect but is a judgment effect.

Authors:  Nagireddy Neelakanteswar Reddy
Journal:  Cogn Process       Date:  2021-11-09

8.  Event-related potential measures of the intending process: time course and related ERP components.

Authors:  Guangheng Dong; Yanbo Hu; Hui Zhou
Journal:  Behav Brain Funct       Date:  2010-02-24       Impact factor: 3.759

9.  What we think before a voluntary movement.

Authors:  Logan Schneider; Elise Houdayer; Ou Bai; Mark Hallett
Journal:  J Cogn Neurosci       Date:  2013-01-30       Impact factor: 3.225

10.  Attention and the speed of information processing: posterior entry for unattended stimuli instead of prior entry for attended stimuli.

Authors:  Katharina Weiß; Frederic Hilkenmeier; Ingrid Scharlau
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-01-30       Impact factor: 3.240

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