International audienceHumans experience themselves as agents, capable of controlling their actions and the outcomes they generate (i.e., the sense of agency). Inferences of agency are not infallible. Research shows that we often attribute outcomes to our agency even though they are caused by another agent. Moreover, agents report the sensory events they generate to be less intense compared to the events that are generated externally. These effects have been assessed using highly suprathreshold stimuli and subjective measurements. Consequently, it remains unclear whether experiencing oneself as an agent lead to a decision criterion change and/or a sensitivity change. Here, we investigate this issue. Participants were told that their key pres...
Goal-directed actions are an essential part of our everyday life. They free us from enslavement to s...
The sense of agency refers to the feeling that one is controlling events through one's own behavior....
The sense of controlling one's own actions is fundamental to normal human mental function, and also ...
The sense of agency describes the ability to experience oneself as the agent of one's own actions. P...
The sense of agency refers to the feeling of control over one’s actions, and, through them, over ext...
People generally have a strong and immediate intuition whether they are the author of an action or n...
Sense of agency refers to the feeling of controlling an external event through one’s own action. On ...
Sense of agency refers to the sense of authorship of an action and its outcome. Sense of agency is o...
The feeling that we are agents, intentionally making things happen by our own actions, is foundation...
Experiencing oneself as the cause of an action is a fundamental building block for a sense of self. ...
The ability to recognize oneself in voluntary action is called the sense of agency and refers to the...
International audienceIt has been hypothesized that an internal model is involved in controlling and...
Item does not contain fulltextTheories of agency-the feeling of being in control of one's actions an...
International audienceThe experience of agency refers to the phenomenal experience of being the caus...
<div><p>The sense of agency refers to the feeling that one is controlling events through one’s own b...
Goal-directed actions are an essential part of our everyday life. They free us from enslavement to s...
The sense of agency refers to the feeling that one is controlling events through one's own behavior....
The sense of controlling one's own actions is fundamental to normal human mental function, and also ...
The sense of agency describes the ability to experience oneself as the agent of one's own actions. P...
The sense of agency refers to the feeling of control over one’s actions, and, through them, over ext...
People generally have a strong and immediate intuition whether they are the author of an action or n...
Sense of agency refers to the feeling of controlling an external event through one’s own action. On ...
Sense of agency refers to the sense of authorship of an action and its outcome. Sense of agency is o...
The feeling that we are agents, intentionally making things happen by our own actions, is foundation...
Experiencing oneself as the cause of an action is a fundamental building block for a sense of self. ...
The ability to recognize oneself in voluntary action is called the sense of agency and refers to the...
International audienceIt has been hypothesized that an internal model is involved in controlling and...
Item does not contain fulltextTheories of agency-the feeling of being in control of one's actions an...
International audienceThe experience of agency refers to the phenomenal experience of being the caus...
<div><p>The sense of agency refers to the feeling that one is controlling events through one’s own b...
Goal-directed actions are an essential part of our everyday life. They free us from enslavement to s...
The sense of agency refers to the feeling that one is controlling events through one's own behavior....
The sense of controlling one's own actions is fundamental to normal human mental function, and also ...