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      On The Nature of Experiencing Self-Agency: The Role of Goals and Primes in Inferring Oneself as the Cause of Behavior : On the Nature of Experiencing Self-Agency

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      Social and Personality Psychology Compass
      Wiley-Blackwell

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          Unconscious determinants of free decisions in the human brain.

          There has been a long controversy as to whether subjectively 'free' decisions are determined by brain activity ahead of time. We found that the outcome of a decision can be encoded in brain activity of prefrontal and parietal cortex up to 10 s before it enters awareness. This delay presumably reflects the operation of a network of high-level control areas that begin to prepare an upcoming decision long before it enters awareness.
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            Beyond the comparator model: a multifactorial two-step account of agency.

            There is an increasing amount of empirical work investigating the sense of agency, i.e. the registration that we are the initiators of our own actions. Many studies try to relate the sense of agency to an internal feed-forward mechanism, called the "comparator model". In this paper, we draw a sharp distinction between a non-conceptual level of feeling of agency and a conceptual level of judgement of agency. By analyzing recent empirical studies, we show that the comparator model is not able to explain either. Rather, we argue for a two-step account: a multifactorial weighting process of different agency indicators accounts for the feeling of agency, which is, in a second step, further processed by conceptual modules to form an attribution judgement. This new framework is then applied to disruptions of agency in schizophrenia, for which the comparator model also fails. Two further extensions are discussed: We show that the comparator model can neither be extended to account for the sense of ownership (which also has to be differentiated into a feeling and a judgement of ownership) nor for the sense of agency for thoughts. Our framework, however, is able to provide a unified account for the sense of agency for both actions and thoughts.
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              TIME OF CONSCIOUS INTENTION TO ACT IN RELATION TO ONSET OF CEREBRAL ACTIVITY (READINESS-POTENTIAL)

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Social and Personality Psychology Compass
                Social and Personality Psychology Compass
                Wiley-Blackwell
                17519004
                December 2013
                December 2013
                : 7
                : 12
                : 888-904
                Article
                10.1111/spc3.12075
                68d50535-2494-4fcd-83e0-c471a361b739
                © 2013

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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