Abstract
Post-stroke motor deficits often disrupt the voluntary control of body movements, leading to abnormal feelings. Among these, alterations in the sense of agency (SoA), the feeling of controlling one’s movement, are notable because SoA facilitates actions. However, whether patients with more severe motor deficits experience poorer SoA and SoA’s clinical impact on motor activity remain unclear. To address these questions, this longitudinal study quantified SoA in 156 post-stroke patients through factor analyses with multiple question items to differentiate SoA from potentially confounding discomfort. Structural equation modeling revealed that SoA decreased significantly with upper-limb motor deficit severity and that reduced SoA correlated significantly with decreased paretic upper-limb use. Notably, this effect persisted after controlling for motor deficit severity, suggesting a direct clinical impact of SoA on motor activity. Further, improvements in SoA were significantly associated with increased upper-limb use in patients with moderate or severe motor deficits, emphasizing the role of SoA in maintaining or increasing paretic upper-limb activity. These findings highlight the importance of rehabilitation treatments that consider patients’ subjective experiences, particularly agency attribution.
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