Angeliki Charalampaki, Anthony Buck Ciston, Elisa Filevich
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Participants (<i>N</i> = 40) reached with their right hand toward a ridged plate with a specific orientation and saw online feedback that could match or differ from their action in one of three ways: the physical plate's orientation, the action's timing, or the hand's position in space. Absolute subjective ratings revealed that an increased mismatch in tactile information led to a diminished sense of agency, similar to what has been reported for spatial and temporal mismatches. Further, estimations of metacognitive efficiency revealed similar Mratios in identifying visuo-tactile violation predictions as compared to visuo-temporal violations (but lower than visuospatial). These findings emphasize the importance of tactile information in shaping our experience of acting voluntarily and show how this important component can be experimentally probed. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
尽管触觉信息在我们的日常活动中无处不在,但有关我们如何体验自己行为的代理权的研究却很少依赖于经过操控的视觉-触觉反馈。相反,被操纵的往往是我们行为的远端(和任意关联的)后果。为数不多的几项研究确实调查了触觉信息是否有助于代理体验,但这些研究仅限于对行动结果存在或不存在的触觉反馈进行二元评估。在这里,我们超越了有触觉反馈与无触觉反馈的粗略比较,而是引入了一种实验操作,即我们可以控制预测与观察之间的不匹配程度。参与者(N = 40)将右手伸向一个有特定方向的棱形板,并看到在线反馈,这些反馈可能在以下三个方面之一与他们的动作相匹配或不同:物理板的方向、动作的时间或手在空间中的位置。绝对主观评分显示,触觉信息不匹配的增加会导致代入感的降低,这与空间和时间不匹配的报道类似。此外,对元认知效率的估算显示,在识别视觉-触觉违规预测方面,Mratios 与视觉-时间违规预测(但低于视觉-空间违规预测)相似。这些发现强调了触觉信息在塑造我们的自愿行为体验方面的重要性,并展示了如何通过实验对这一重要组成部分进行探究。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, 版权所有)。
Contributions of tactile information to the sense of agency and its metacognitive representations.
Despite the ubiquitous presence of tactile information in our daily activities, studies of how we experience agency of our actions have rarely relied on manipulated visuo-tactile feedback. Instead, what is often manipulated are the distal (and arbitrarily associated) consequences of our actions. The few studies that did investigate whether tactile information contributes to the experience of agency have been limited to the binary assessment of tactile feedback about the outcome of an action being present or absent. Here, we went beyond the coarse comparison of agency with versus without tactile feedback and introduced instead an experimental manipulation where we could control the amount of mismatch between predictions and observations. Participants (N = 40) reached with their right hand toward a ridged plate with a specific orientation and saw online feedback that could match or differ from their action in one of three ways: the physical plate's orientation, the action's timing, or the hand's position in space. Absolute subjective ratings revealed that an increased mismatch in tactile information led to a diminished sense of agency, similar to what has been reported for spatial and temporal mismatches. Further, estimations of metacognitive efficiency revealed similar Mratios in identifying visuo-tactile violation predictions as compared to visuo-temporal violations (but lower than visuospatial). These findings emphasize the importance of tactile information in shaping our experience of acting voluntarily and show how this important component can be experimentally probed. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).