Effects of Human Synchronous Hand Movements in Eliciting a Sense of Agency and Ownership

The self is built as an entity independent from the external world using the human ability to experience the senses of agency and ownership. Humans usually experience these senses during movement. Nevertheless, researchers recently reported that another person’s synchronous mirror-symmetrical moveme...

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Veröffentlicht in:Scientific reports 2020-02, Vol.10 (1), p.2038-2038, Article 2038
Hauptverfasser: Hao, Qiao, Ora, Hiroki, Ogawa, Ken-ichiro, Amano, Shun-ichi, Miyake, Yoshihiro
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creator Hao, Qiao
Ora, Hiroki
Ogawa, Ken-ichiro
Amano, Shun-ichi
Miyake, Yoshihiro
description The self is built as an entity independent from the external world using the human ability to experience the senses of agency and ownership. Humans usually experience these senses during movement. Nevertheless, researchers recently reported that another person’s synchronous mirror-symmetrical movements elicited both agency and ownership in research participants. However, it is unclear whether this elicitation was caused by the synchronicity or the mirror symmetry of the movements. To address this question, we investigated the effect of interpersonal synchronization on the self-reported sense of agency and ownership in two conditions, using movements with and without mirror symmetry. Participants performed rhythmic hand movements while viewing the experimenter’s synchronous or random hand movements, and then reported their perceptions of agency and ownership in a questionnaire. We observed that agency and ownership were significantly elicited by the experimenter’s synchronous hand movements in both conditions. The results suggested that the synchronous movements of another person—rather than mirror- or non-mirror-symmetrical movements—appear to elicit the experience of a sense of agency and ownership. The results also suggested that people could experience these senses not only from their own movements but also from another person’s synchronous movements.
doi_str_mv 10.1038/s41598-020-59014-2
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subjects 631/378/2649/1723
631/477/2811
Adult
Awareness - physiology
Female
Hand - physiology
Humanities and Social Sciences
Humans
Male
Motion Perception - physiology
Movement - physiology
multidisciplinary
Rhythms
Science
Science (multidisciplinary)
Sensory systems
Symmetry
Synchronization
Young Adult
title Effects of Human Synchronous Hand Movements in Eliciting a Sense of Agency and Ownership
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