Voluntary actions are often accompanied by a conscious experience of intention. The content of this experience, and its neural basis, remain controversial. On one view, the mind just retrospectively ascribes intentions to explain the occurrence of actions that lack obvious triggering stimuli. Here, we use EEG frequency analysis of sensorimotor rhythms to investigate brain activity when a participant (CL, co-author of this paper) with congenital absence of the left hand and arm, prepared and made a voluntary action with the right or the phantom ‘left hand’. CL reported the moment she experienced the intention to press a key. This timepoint was then used as a marker for aligning and averaging EEG. In a second condition, CL was asked to prepar...
This case study was performed to assess objectively intention in movement for a child with severe mo...
How do we know whether our own actions were voluntary or involuntary? Intentional theories of sense ...
A question still debated within cognitive neuroscience is whether signals present during actions sig...
Voluntary actions are often accompanied by a conscious experience of intention. The content of this ...
AbstractVoluntary actions are often accompanied by a conscious experience of intention. The content ...
Item does not contain fulltextAn important aspect of volition is the internal decision whether to ac...
The distinct feeling of wanting to act and thereby causing our own actions is crucial to our self-pe...
A central question in the study of human behavior is the origin of willed action. EEG recordings of ...
It is assumed that while performing a goal-oriented arm movement we anticipate feeling changes in ou...
Neurophysiological accounts of human volition are dominated by debates on the origin of voluntary ch...
Objectives: The sense of body-ownership grounds on the ability to feel our bodies as part of an expe...
The brain processes involved in the planning and initiation of voluntary action are of great interes...
Conventionally, voluntary conscious acts and automatic behavior have been considered to be mediated ...
The present study shows evidence for conscious motor intention in motor preparation prior to movemen...
Feedforward mechanisms are important for movement control. They may also contribute to the identific...
This case study was performed to assess objectively intention in movement for a child with severe mo...
How do we know whether our own actions were voluntary or involuntary? Intentional theories of sense ...
A question still debated within cognitive neuroscience is whether signals present during actions sig...
Voluntary actions are often accompanied by a conscious experience of intention. The content of this ...
AbstractVoluntary actions are often accompanied by a conscious experience of intention. The content ...
Item does not contain fulltextAn important aspect of volition is the internal decision whether to ac...
The distinct feeling of wanting to act and thereby causing our own actions is crucial to our self-pe...
A central question in the study of human behavior is the origin of willed action. EEG recordings of ...
It is assumed that while performing a goal-oriented arm movement we anticipate feeling changes in ou...
Neurophysiological accounts of human volition are dominated by debates on the origin of voluntary ch...
Objectives: The sense of body-ownership grounds on the ability to feel our bodies as part of an expe...
The brain processes involved in the planning and initiation of voluntary action are of great interes...
Conventionally, voluntary conscious acts and automatic behavior have been considered to be mediated ...
The present study shows evidence for conscious motor intention in motor preparation prior to movemen...
Feedforward mechanisms are important for movement control. They may also contribute to the identific...
This case study was performed to assess objectively intention in movement for a child with severe mo...
How do we know whether our own actions were voluntary or involuntary? Intentional theories of sense ...
A question still debated within cognitive neuroscience is whether signals present during actions sig...