International audienceNaturalistic joint action between two agents typically requires both motor coordination and strategic cooperation. However, these two fundamental processes have systematically been studied independently. We presented 50 dyads of adult participants with a novel collaborative task that combined different levels of motor noise with different levels of strategic noise, to determine whether the sense of agency (the experience of control over an action) reflects the interplay between these low-level (motor) and high-level (strategic) dimensions. We also examined how dominance in motor control could influence prosocial behaviors. We found that self-agency was particularly dependent on motor cues, whereas joint agency was part...
Coordination with other people is a central part of human life. Whenever we wave at a friend, help o...
As social agents, humans continuously interact with with the people around them. Here, motor coopera...
International audienceThis chapter is concerned with how implicit, nonverbal cues support coordinate...
International audienceNaturalistic joint action between two agents typically requires both motor coo...
International audienceNaturalistic joint action usually requires both motor coordination and strateg...
Philosophers have proposed that when people coordinate their actions with others they may experience...
Many everyday motor tasks require interpersonal action where the goal of the joint task is shared am...
International audienceThe sense of agency (SoA) experienced in joint action is an essential subjecti...
The sense of agency refers to the feeling of generating and controlling actions and their effects. P...
Spatiotemporal parameters of voluntary motor action may help optimize human social interactions. Yet...
The sense of agency – the subjective feeling of being in control of our own actions – is one central...
In social interactions, the movements performed by others can be used to anticipate their intention....
When two people physically interact to manipulate an object, they synchronize their actions to achie...
Performing online complementary motor adjustments is quintessential to joint actions since it allows...
Helping someone carry a table is fairly easy; however, our understanding of such joint motor actions...
Coordination with other people is a central part of human life. Whenever we wave at a friend, help o...
As social agents, humans continuously interact with with the people around them. Here, motor coopera...
International audienceThis chapter is concerned with how implicit, nonverbal cues support coordinate...
International audienceNaturalistic joint action between two agents typically requires both motor coo...
International audienceNaturalistic joint action usually requires both motor coordination and strateg...
Philosophers have proposed that when people coordinate their actions with others they may experience...
Many everyday motor tasks require interpersonal action where the goal of the joint task is shared am...
International audienceThe sense of agency (SoA) experienced in joint action is an essential subjecti...
The sense of agency refers to the feeling of generating and controlling actions and their effects. P...
Spatiotemporal parameters of voluntary motor action may help optimize human social interactions. Yet...
The sense of agency – the subjective feeling of being in control of our own actions – is one central...
In social interactions, the movements performed by others can be used to anticipate their intention....
When two people physically interact to manipulate an object, they synchronize their actions to achie...
Performing online complementary motor adjustments is quintessential to joint actions since it allows...
Helping someone carry a table is fairly easy; however, our understanding of such joint motor actions...
Coordination with other people is a central part of human life. Whenever we wave at a friend, help o...
As social agents, humans continuously interact with with the people around them. Here, motor coopera...
International audienceThis chapter is concerned with how implicit, nonverbal cues support coordinate...