Literature DB >> 34751857

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

Nagireddy Neelakanteswar Reddy1.   

Abstract

The sense of agency (SoA) is characterized as the sense of being the causal agent of one's own actions, and it is measured in two forms: explicit and implicit. In the explicit SoA experiments, the participants explicitly report whether they have a sense of control over their actions or whether they or somebody else is the causal agent of seen actions; the implicit SoA experiments study how do participants' agentive or voluntary actions modify perceptual processes (like time, vision, tactility, and audition) without directly asking the participants to explicitly think about their causal agency or sense of control. However, recent implicit SoA literature reported contradictory findings of the relationship between implicit SoA reports and agency states. Thus, I argue that the purported implicit SoA reports are not agency-driven perceptual effects per se but are judgment effects, by showing that (a) the typical operationalizations in implicit SoA domain lead to perceptual uncertainty on the part of the participants, (b) under uncertainty, participants' implicit SoA reports are due to heuristic judgments which are independent of agency states, and (c) under perceptual certainty, the typical implicit SoA reports might not have occurred at all. Thus, I conclude that the instances of implicit SoA are judgments (or response biases)-under uncertainty-rather than perceptual effects.
© 2021. Marta Olivetti Belardinelli and Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Implicit sense of agency; Intentional binding; Perception versus judgment; Sensory attenuation

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 34751857     DOI: 10.1007/s10339-021-01066-x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cogn Process        ISSN: 1612-4782


  135 in total

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