Environmental control and psychosis-relevant traits modulate the prospective sense of agency in non-clinical individuals

•Environmental and individual trait effects on implicit sense of agency are dissociable.•Device-controlled environments reduce prospective sense of agency.•Intentional binding relies on motor interactions between agent and environment.•Personality is linked with prospective sense of agency in a cont...

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Veröffentlicht in:Consciousness and cognition 2019-08, Vol.73, p.102776-102776, Article 102776
Hauptverfasser: Di Plinio, Simone, Arnò, Simone, Perrucci, Mauro Gianni, Ebisch, Sjoerd J.H.
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container_end_page 102776
container_issue
container_start_page 102776
container_title Consciousness and cognition
container_volume 73
creator Di Plinio, Simone
Arnò, Simone
Perrucci, Mauro Gianni
Ebisch, Sjoerd J.H.
description •Environmental and individual trait effects on implicit sense of agency are dissociable.•Device-controlled environments reduce prospective sense of agency.•Intentional binding relies on motor interactions between agent and environment.•Personality is linked with prospective sense of agency in a context-dependent manner. The sense of agency concerns the experience of being the source of one’s own actions and their consequences. An altered sense of agency can occur due to task automation and in psychosis. We tested in a non-clinical sample the hypothesis that reducing voluntary task control diminishes intentional binding as an implicit indicator of the sense of agency, possibly interacting with psychosis-relevant personality traits. Agent-device interactions were manipulated obtaining positive-control (voluntary interaction), no-control (automation), and negative-control (device-commanded interaction) groups. The main results showed reduced prospective intentional binding (predictive coding of action consequences) in the no-control and negative-control groups, compared to the positive-control group. Psychosis-like experiences covaried positively with intentional binding in the no-control group, but negatively in the negative-control group. Moreover, positive-social traits were associated with increased intentional binding in the positive-control group. These findings demonstrate the interplay between environmental and individual differences variables in establishing the implicit sense of agency.
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source Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Automation
Automatizing
Device-controlled environment
Environmental control
Intentional binding
Motor intention
Predictive
Prospective
Psychosis
Schizotypal
Sense of agency
Social
title Environmental control and psychosis-relevant traits modulate the prospective sense of agency in non-clinical individuals
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