Abstract

The Sense of Agency (SoA) is the experience of controlling one's movements and their external consequences. Accumulating evidence suggests that freedom to act enhances SoA, while prediction errors are known to reduce it. Here, we investigated if prediction errors related to movement or to the achievement of the goal of the action exert the same influence on SoA during free and cued actions. Participants pressed a freely chosen or cued-colored button, while observing a virtual hand moving in the same or in the opposite direction-i.e., movement-related prediction error-and pressing the selected or a different color-i.e., goal-related prediction error. To investigate implicit and explicit components of SoA, we collected indirect (i.e., Synchrony Judgments) and direct (i.e., Judgments of Causation) measures. We found that participants judged virtual actions as more synchronous when they were free to act. Additionally, movement-related prediction errors reduced both perceived synchrony and judgments of causation, while goal-related prediction errors impaired exclusively the latter. Our results suggest that freedom to act enhances SoA and that movement and goal-related prediction errors lead to an equivalent reduction of SoA in free and cued actions. Our results also show that the influence of freedom to act and goal achievement may be limited, respectively, to implicit and explicit SoA, while movement information may affect both components. These findings provide support to recent theories that view SoA as a multifaceted construct, by showing that different action cues may uniquely influence the feeling of control.

Highlights

  • The Sense of Agency (SoA) is the experience of controlling one s movements and their consequences in the external environment (Aarts et al, 2012; Moore & Fletcher, 2012; Tsakiris, Longo, & Haggard, 2010)

  • The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of movement and goal-related prediction errors on implicit and explicit components of SoA within free and cued contexts of action, and if they both lead to behavioral adjustments

  • In this study we investigated the effects of movement and goal-related prediction-errors on implicit and explicit components of the Sense of Agency and on behavioral adjustments when participants performed freely chosen and cued actions

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Summary

Introduction

The Sense of Agency (SoA) is the experience of controlling one s movements and their consequences in the external environment (Aarts et al, 2012; Moore & Fletcher, 2012; Tsakiris, Longo, & Haggard, 2010). It has been proposed that SoA involves an implicit, non-conceptual component i.e., feeling of agency that relies mostly on sensorimotor information, and an explicit, conceptual and interpretative component i.e., judgment of agency that relies on the formation of beliefs about the causes of actions and their consequences (Synofzik et al, 2008a, 2008b). This distinction implies that SoA may depend on a set of multiple cues, such as contextual information and a comparison between the predicted and actual consequences of actions (Moore & Fletcher, 2012; Synofzik et al, 2013). Prediction errors can broadly be defined as a mismatch between prior expectations and reality

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