Abstract

Sense of agency (SoA) is the sense of having control over one’s own actions and through them events in the outside world. SoA may be estimated by integrating different agency cues. In the present study, we examined whether the use of different agency cues – action-effect congruency, temporal relation between action and effect, and affective valence of effects – differs between Eastern (Mongolian) and Western (Austrian) cultures. In a learning phase, participants learned to associate different actions (keypresses) with positive and negative action effects (smileys). In a test phase, participants performed the same keypresses. After different intervals positive and negative action effects, which were either congruent or incongruent with the previously acquired action-effect associations, were presented. In each trial participants were asked to rate how likely the action effect was caused by themselves or by the computer (authorship ratings). In both groups authorship ratings were higher for congruent compared to incongruent action effects and for positive compared to negative action effects. This indicates that action-effect congruency and affective valence of action effects modulate SoA. Further, in both groups the difference between positive and negative effects was higher with congruent effects than incongruent effects. This overadditive effect of action-effect congruency and affective valence might indicate that an integration of different agency cues takes place. Decreasing authorship ratings with increasing interval were observed in Austrians but not in Mongolians. For Mongolians, the temporal chronology of events might be less important when inferring causality. Therefore, information regarding the temporal occurrence of the effect might not be used as an agency cue in Mongolians. In conclusion, some agency cues might be similarly used in different cultures, but the use of others might be culture-dependent.

Highlights

  • Sense of agency (SoA) is the sense of having control over one’s own actions and through them events in the outside world (Haggard and Tsakiris, 2009)

  • We were interested in the question whether agency cues like the congruency between action and effect, the temporal relation between action and effect, and the affective valence of the effect influence SoA differently in Eastern (Mongolia) and Western (Austria) cultures

  • We further focused on affective valence of the effect as agency cue, because it has been claimed that the affective valence of an effect modulates SoA differently in Eastern and Western participants (Barlas and Obhi, 2014)

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Summary

Introduction

Sense of agency (SoA) is the sense of having control over one’s own actions and through them events in the outside world (Haggard and Tsakiris, 2009). It forms the basis for beliefs in free will (Aarts and van den Bos, 2011) and serves central social functions, like attribution of social or legal responsibility, which is vital to a functioning society We were interested in the question whether agency cues like the congruency between action and effect, the temporal relation between action and effect, and the affective valence of the effect influence SoA differently in Eastern (Mongolia) and Western (Austria) cultures

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