| Literature DB >> 23060848 |
Carola Haering1, Andrea Kiesel.
Abstract
When a key press causes a stimulus, the key press is perceived later and the stimulus earlier than key presses and stimuli presented independently. This bias in time perception has been linked to the intention to produce the effect and thus been called intentional binding (IB). In recent studies it has been shown that the IB effect is stronger when participants believed that they caused the effect stimulus compared to when they believed that another person caused the effect (Desantis et al., 2011). In this experiment we ask whether causal beliefs influence the perceived time of an effect when the putative effect occurs temporally close to another stimulus that is also an effect. In our study two participants performed the same task on connected computers with separate screens. Each trial started synchronously on both computers. When a participant pressed a key, a red and a yellow stimulus appeared as action effects simultaneously or with a slight delay of up to 50 ms. The participants' task was to judge the temporal order of these two effect stimuli. Participants were either told that one participant caused one of the two stimuli while the other participant seated at the other computer caused the other stimulus, or each participant was told that he/she caused both stimuli. The different causal beliefs changed the perceived time of the effects' appearance relative to each other. When participants believed they each caused one effect, their "own" effect was perceived earlier than the other participant's effect. When the participants believed each caused both effects, no difference in the perceived temporal order of the red and yellow effect was found. These results confirm that higher order causal beliefs change the perceived time of an action effect even in a setting in which the occurrence of the putative effect can be directly compared to a reference stimulus.Entities:
Keywords: TOJ; agency; causal belief; causality; intentional binding; temporal order judgments
Year: 2012 PMID: 23060848 PMCID: PMC3465983 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2012.00393
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Figure 1Experimental layout. The two computers were connected via parallel port. The situation depicts an instruction block in the single effect group: The right participant performs key presses always triggering his “own” effect, here the red life buoy, while the left participant watches. Earlier the right participant had watched the left participant triggering her “own” effect, the yellow life buoy. After the instruction phase each participant performed the task on his/her computer separated by the divider wall. Throughout experimental trials both participants wore headphones delivering white noise to ensure they did not hear button presses.
Figure 2Schematic trial procedure of the temporal order judgment (TOJ) task. Effect stimuli (the life buoys) were presented simultaneously or separated by a delay of 10–50 ms. TOJs were given by clicking on the life buoy the participant judged to have appeared earlier. The location of red and yellow stimuli on the screen was counterbalanced within participants. For better readability in the figure the background color is shown in white instead of blue in the experiment and texts are printed in black instead of white.
Figure 3Results of prototypical participants (left) and group means for the PSS (right). On the left fitted functions of three prototypical participants from the single effect yellow and red group (colors according to group name) and the compound effect group (dashed line). The group means of the points of subjective simultaneity are shown in the bar chart on the right. Error bars depict standard errors.