A multi-measurement study of the relation between deliberation and volition.

IF 4.3 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, BIOLOGICAL
Neuroscience of Consciousness Pub Date : 2025-08-07 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1093/nc/niaf023
Guillaume P Pech, Emilie A Caspar, Elisabeth Pacherie, Axel Cleeremans, Uri Maoz
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Abstract

Historically, voluntary action and volition more generally have been investigated through the lens of meaningless decisions. Importantly, these findings have been used in the debate about key notions like free will and moral responsibility. However, more recent claims have challenged the possibility of generalizing findings from a meaningless context to a more meaningful one. The current study investigates the markers of volition, specifically comparing meaningful and meaningless decisions. In an effort to maximize their monetary gain, 50 participants repeatedly deliberated between two options, making either rewarded choices-hard-deliberation decisions (where the options differed along two dimensions) or easy-deliberation decisions (where the options differed along a single dimension)-or unrewarded choices, a.k.a. arbitrary decision. This enabled us to contrast rewarded and unrewarded decisions as well as the degree of deliberation between easy- and hard-deliberation choices. We found evidence that rewarded and unrewarded decisions differed along several measures related to volition: participants reported a higher sense of volition, exhibited a stronger Readiness Potential, had increased temporal binding (mostly inconclusive), and demonstrated increased Effort Exerted in the rewarded condition. In contrast, we found evidence for similarity across these measures between easy-deliberation and hard-deliberation conditions. Our results suggest that it is not the complexity of the deliberation process prior to the action that makes it more volitional, but rather that the decision serves a meaningful goal. Our study also introduced a new implicit measure of volition- effort exerted-that well aligned with other measures of volition and should therefore prove useful in future studies.

审慎与意志关系的多测量研究。
从历史上看,自愿行动和意志通常是通过无意义的决定来研究的。重要的是,这些发现被用于关于自由意志和道德责任等关键概念的辩论。然而,最近的一些研究挑战了将研究结果从无意义的情境推广到更有意义的情境的可能性。目前的研究调查了意志的标志,特别是比较有意义和无意义的决定。为了使他们的金钱收益最大化,50名参与者在两个选择之间反复考虑,要么做出奖励的选择——艰难的决定(选项在两个维度上不同),要么做出容易的决定(选项在一个维度上不同),要么做出无奖励的选择,也就是武断的决定。这使我们能够对比有奖励和无奖励的决定,以及容易和困难选择之间的深思熟虑程度。我们发现有证据表明,有奖励和无奖励的决定在与意志相关的几个指标上有所不同:参与者报告了更高的意志感,表现出更强的准备潜力,有更多的时间约束(主要是不确定的),并且在奖励条件下表现出更多的努力。相比之下,我们发现了在容易审议和困难审议条件之间这些措施的相似性的证据。我们的研究结果表明,并不是行动前考虑过程的复杂性使其更具意志性,而是决策服务于有意义的目标。我们的研究还引入了一种新的隐性意志衡量标准——努力——它与其他意志衡量标准很好地结合在一起,因此在未来的研究中应该证明是有用的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Neuroscience of Consciousness
Neuroscience of Consciousness Psychology-Clinical Psychology
CiteScore
6.90
自引率
2.40%
发文量
16
审稿时长
19 weeks
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