Temporal binding refers to a subjective shortening of elapsed time between actions and their resultant consequences. Originally, it was thought that temporal binding is specific to motor learning and arises as a consequence of either sensory adaptation or the associative principles of the forward model of motor command. Both of these interpretations assume that the binding effect is rooted in the motor system and, critically, that it is driven by intentional action planning. The research reported here demonstrates that both intentional actions and mechanical causes result in temporal binding, which suggests that intentional action is not necessary for temporal binding and that binding results from the causal relation linking actions with th...
The problem of how humans and other intelligent systems construct causal representations from non-ca...
According to widely held views in cognitive science harking back to David Hume, causality cannot be ...
For over a decade, it has been known that intended actions and their sensory consequences are judged...
Temporal binding refers to a subjective shortening of elapsed time between actions and their resulta...
In temporal binding, the temporal interval between one event and another, occurring some time later,...
International audienceIntentional binding refers to the fact that when a voluntary action produces a...
Intentional binding refers to the fact that when a voluntary action produces a sensory outcome, acti...
Previous studies have documented a subjective temporal attraction between actions and their effects....
Intentional motor actions and their effects are bound together in temporal perception, resulting in ...
Intentional actions that cause an effect are accompanied by an experience of a feeling of control an...
In temporal binding, the temporal interval between one event and another, occurring some time later,...
Recently, it has been shown that the perceived times of voluntary movements and their effects are pe...
In temporal binding, the temporal interval between one event and another, occurring some time later,...
If you expect that your action causes a near effect, you perceive the action and the effect as close...
This article revisits Haggard, Clark, and Kalogeras’s (2002) seminal discovery of temporal binding b...
The problem of how humans and other intelligent systems construct causal representations from non-ca...
According to widely held views in cognitive science harking back to David Hume, causality cannot be ...
For over a decade, it has been known that intended actions and their sensory consequences are judged...
Temporal binding refers to a subjective shortening of elapsed time between actions and their resulta...
In temporal binding, the temporal interval between one event and another, occurring some time later,...
International audienceIntentional binding refers to the fact that when a voluntary action produces a...
Intentional binding refers to the fact that when a voluntary action produces a sensory outcome, acti...
Previous studies have documented a subjective temporal attraction between actions and their effects....
Intentional motor actions and their effects are bound together in temporal perception, resulting in ...
Intentional actions that cause an effect are accompanied by an experience of a feeling of control an...
In temporal binding, the temporal interval between one event and another, occurring some time later,...
Recently, it has been shown that the perceived times of voluntary movements and their effects are pe...
In temporal binding, the temporal interval between one event and another, occurring some time later,...
If you expect that your action causes a near effect, you perceive the action and the effect as close...
This article revisits Haggard, Clark, and Kalogeras’s (2002) seminal discovery of temporal binding b...
The problem of how humans and other intelligent systems construct causal representations from non-ca...
According to widely held views in cognitive science harking back to David Hume, causality cannot be ...
For over a decade, it has been known that intended actions and their sensory consequences are judged...