TY - JOUR
T1 - Attentional control and inferences of agency
T2 - Working memory load differentially modulates goal-based and prime-based agency experiences
AU - Renes, Robert A.
AU - Van Haren, Neeltje E M
AU - Aarts, Henk
PY - 2015/12/15
Y1 - 2015/12/15
N2 - Previous research indicates that people can infer self-agency, the experience of causing outcomes as a result of one's own actions, in situations where information about action-outcomes is pre-activated through goal-setting or priming. We argue that goal-based agency inferences rely on attentional control that processes information about matches and mismatches between intended and actual outcomes. Prime-based inferences follow an automatic cognitive accessibility process that relies on matches between primed and actual information about outcomes. We tested an improved task for a better examination of goal-based vs. primed-based agency inferences, and examined the moderating effect of working memory load on both types of inferences. Findings of four studies showed that goal-based, but not prime-based agency inferences dwindled under working memory load. These findings suggest that goal-based (vs. primed-based) agency inferences indeed rely on attentional control, thus rendering goal-based agency inferences especially prone to conditions that modulate goal-directed control processes.
AB - Previous research indicates that people can infer self-agency, the experience of causing outcomes as a result of one's own actions, in situations where information about action-outcomes is pre-activated through goal-setting or priming. We argue that goal-based agency inferences rely on attentional control that processes information about matches and mismatches between intended and actual outcomes. Prime-based inferences follow an automatic cognitive accessibility process that relies on matches between primed and actual information about outcomes. We tested an improved task for a better examination of goal-based vs. primed-based agency inferences, and examined the moderating effect of working memory load on both types of inferences. Findings of four studies showed that goal-based, but not prime-based agency inferences dwindled under working memory load. These findings suggest that goal-based (vs. primed-based) agency inferences indeed rely on attentional control, thus rendering goal-based agency inferences especially prone to conditions that modulate goal-directed control processes.
KW - Attentional control
KW - Goals
KW - Outcome priming
KW - Self-agency
KW - Working memory
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84944879672&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.concog.2015.10.002
DO - 10.1016/j.concog.2015.10.002
M3 - Article
C2 - 26497069
AN - SCOPUS:84944879672
SN - 1053-8100
VL - 38
SP - 38
EP - 49
JO - Consciousness and Cognition
JF - Consciousness and Cognition
ER -