Social transmission of experience of agency: an experimental study

The sense of controlling one’s own actions is fundamental to normal human mental function, and also underlies concepts of social responsibility for action. However, it remains unclear how the wider social context of human action influences sense of agency. Using a simple experimental design, we inve...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Nima Khalighinejad, Bahador Bahrami, Emilie A Caspar, Patrick Haggard
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2016-08-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01315/full
id doaj-bfa25e5c1ba5479f9032850c60681d6d
record_format Article
spelling doaj-bfa25e5c1ba5479f9032850c60681d6d2020-11-24T21:28:25ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782016-08-01710.3389/fpsyg.2016.01315203176Social transmission of experience of agency: an experimental studyNima Khalighinejad0Bahador Bahrami1Emilie A Caspar2Patrick Haggard3University College LondonUniversity College LondonULB Neuroscience Institute (UNI), Université libre de Bruxelles (ULB)University College LondonThe sense of controlling one’s own actions is fundamental to normal human mental function, and also underlies concepts of social responsibility for action. However, it remains unclear how the wider social context of human action influences sense of agency. Using a simple experimental design, we investigated, for the first time, how observing the action of another person or a robot could potentially influence one’s own sense of agency. We assessed how observing another’s action might change the perceived temporal relationship between one’s own voluntary actions and their outcomes, which has been proposed as an implicit measure of sense of agency. Working in pairs, participants chose between two action alternatives, one rewarded more frequently than the other, while watching a rotating clock hand. They judged, in separate blocks, either the time of their own action, or the time of a tone that followed the action. These were compared to baseline judgements of actions alone, or tones alone, to calculate the perceptual shift of action toward outcome and vice versa. Our design focused on how these two dependent variables, which jointly provide an implicit measure of sense of agency, might be influenced by observing another’s action. In the observational group, each participant could see the other’s actions. Multivariate analysis showed that the perceived time of action and tone shifted progressively toward the actual time of outcome with repeated experience of this social situation. No such progressive change occurred in other groups for whom a barrier hid participants’ actions from each other. However, a similar effect was observed in the group that viewed movements of a human-like robotic hand, rather than actions of another person. This finding suggests that observing the actions of others increases the salience of the external outcomes of action and this effect is not unique to observing human agents. Social contexts in which we see others controlling external events may play an important role in mentally representing the impact of our own actions on the external world.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01315/fullsense of agencyaction observationSocial contextIntentional BindingRobotic hand
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nima Khalighinejad
Bahador Bahrami
Emilie A Caspar
Patrick Haggard
spellingShingle Nima Khalighinejad
Bahador Bahrami
Emilie A Caspar
Patrick Haggard
Social transmission of experience of agency: an experimental study
Frontiers in Psychology
sense of agency
action observation
Social context
Intentional Binding
Robotic hand
author_facet Nima Khalighinejad
Bahador Bahrami
Emilie A Caspar
Patrick Haggard
author_sort Nima Khalighinejad
title Social transmission of experience of agency: an experimental study
title_short Social transmission of experience of agency: an experimental study
title_full Social transmission of experience of agency: an experimental study
title_fullStr Social transmission of experience of agency: an experimental study
title_full_unstemmed Social transmission of experience of agency: an experimental study
title_sort social transmission of experience of agency: an experimental study
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2016-08-01
description The sense of controlling one’s own actions is fundamental to normal human mental function, and also underlies concepts of social responsibility for action. However, it remains unclear how the wider social context of human action influences sense of agency. Using a simple experimental design, we investigated, for the first time, how observing the action of another person or a robot could potentially influence one’s own sense of agency. We assessed how observing another’s action might change the perceived temporal relationship between one’s own voluntary actions and their outcomes, which has been proposed as an implicit measure of sense of agency. Working in pairs, participants chose between two action alternatives, one rewarded more frequently than the other, while watching a rotating clock hand. They judged, in separate blocks, either the time of their own action, or the time of a tone that followed the action. These were compared to baseline judgements of actions alone, or tones alone, to calculate the perceptual shift of action toward outcome and vice versa. Our design focused on how these two dependent variables, which jointly provide an implicit measure of sense of agency, might be influenced by observing another’s action. In the observational group, each participant could see the other’s actions. Multivariate analysis showed that the perceived time of action and tone shifted progressively toward the actual time of outcome with repeated experience of this social situation. No such progressive change occurred in other groups for whom a barrier hid participants’ actions from each other. However, a similar effect was observed in the group that viewed movements of a human-like robotic hand, rather than actions of another person. This finding suggests that observing the actions of others increases the salience of the external outcomes of action and this effect is not unique to observing human agents. Social contexts in which we see others controlling external events may play an important role in mentally representing the impact of our own actions on the external world.
topic sense of agency
action observation
Social context
Intentional Binding
Robotic hand
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01315/full
work_keys_str_mv AT nimakhalighinejad socialtransmissionofexperienceofagencyanexperimentalstudy
AT bahadorbahrami socialtransmissionofexperienceofagencyanexperimentalstudy
AT emilieacaspar socialtransmissionofexperienceofagencyanexperimentalstudy
AT patrickhaggard socialtransmissionofexperienceofagencyanexperimentalstudy
_version_ 1725970502054313984