Elsevier

NeuroImage

Volume 150, 15 April 2017, Pages 1-13
NeuroImage

How action selection influences the sense of agency: An ERP study

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2017.02.015Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Highlights

  • Difficulty of action selection reduces the sense of agency over action outcomes.

  • Neural signals at the time of the action contribute to judgements of agency.

  • Neural processing of action outcomes also contributes to sense of agency.

  • Sense of agency integrates action- and outcome-related neural information.

Abstract

Sense of agency (SoA) refers to the feeling that we are in control of our actions and, through them, of events in the outside world. One influential view claims that the SoA depends on retrospectively matching the expected and actual outcomes of action. However, recent studies have revealed an additional, prospective component to SoA, driven by action selection processes. We used event-related potentials (ERPs) to clarify the neural mechanisms underlying prospective agency. Subliminal priming was used to manipulate the fluency of selecting a left or right hand action in response to a supraliminal target. These actions were followed by one of several coloured circles, after a variable delay. Participants then rated their degree of control over this visual outcome. Incompatible priming impaired action selection, and reduced sense of agency over action outcomes, relative to compatible priming. More negative ERPs immediately after the action, linked to post-decisional action monitoring, were associated with reduced agency ratings over action outcomes. Additionally, feedback-related negativity evoked by the outcome was also associated with reduced agency ratings. These ERP components may reflect brain processes underlying prospective and retrospective components of sense of agency respectively.

Keywords

Sense of agency
Action selection
Metacognition
Action monitoring
Cognitive control
Evoked potentials

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