iScience
Volume 23, Issue 5, 22 May 2020, 101112
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Article
The Active Sensing of Control Difference

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.isci.2020.101112Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • This study examines how people explore their control over multiple objects

  • The results support a two-step behavior mechanism of active sensing of control

  • People first sense their overall control over the environment at an early stage

  • The initial exploration tunes the sensitivity of detecting control difference

Summary

In everyday life, people control objects in the world around them to varying degrees. The processes people actively use to establish their control, while interacting with an environment containing large ambiguity, remain unknown. This study examines how people explore their control over the environment and how they detect small differences in control among objects. In the experimental task, participants moved three dots on a screen and identified one dot over which the level of control is different from that of the other two. The results support a two-step behavior mechanism underlying the sensing of control difference: People first explore their overall control in the environment, and then the results of the initial exploration are used to selectively tune the direction (i.e., either more or less) of the detected control difference, ensuring efficient and rapid detection of the type of control difference that is potentially important for further action selections.

Subject Areas

Neuroscience
Behavioral Neuroscience
Cognitive Neuroscience

Cited by (0)

5

These authors contributed equally

6

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