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The self as a generative, teleological, and subjective prior: Mutually-modulated temporal agency

Authors :
Tomohisa Asai
Hiroshi Imamizu
Shu Imaizumi
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2019.

Abstract

How can we certify our existence? Recent theoretical studies have suggested that, in the brain, the effect inversely infers the possibility of the existence of the self as the cause. While this Bayesian view of the sense of agency is widely accepted, empirical evidence in support of this theory is still lacking. The current study examined outcome-modulated agency in terms of time perception in seven experiments, with a total of 90 participants. It was hypothesized that perceptual generation, not termination, should subjectively infer the existence of the self, even though both include the same stimuli and are driven by the same teleological action. Results suggest support for the hypothesis (Experiments 1 and 2). Participants judged stronger self-agency, detected less delay, or felt shorter duration for auditory generation, compared with termination, which was driven by the same volitional key-press. Furthermore, the main experiment, Experiment 3, focused on temporal probability distributions both for action and outcome (e.g., standard deviations or relative entropy), and concluded that the observed contrast in onset/offset agency indicates a mutual or bidirectional relationship between cause and effect only during agentive action, characterized by active (i.e., teleological) generation. Finally, the concurrent theoretical models for volitional action-modulated time perception are discussed on the basis of the suggested triplet (generativity, teleology, and subjectivity) dimensions of agency.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1684432c2b9d5b1f369ca21bb9020007
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/519934