In and out of control: brain mechanisms linking fluency of action selection to self-agency in patients with schizophrenia
Author(s) -
Martin Voss,
Valérian Chambon,
Dorit Wenke,
Simone Kühn,
Patrick Haggard
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
brain
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.142
H-Index - 336
eISSN - 1460-2156
pISSN - 0006-8950
DOI - 10.1093/brain/awx136
Subject(s) - sense of agency , psychology , action selection , agency (philosophy) , schizophrenia (object oriented programming) , angular gyrus , priming (agriculture) , action (physics) , cognitive psychology , neuroscience , inferior frontal gyrus , fluency , functional magnetic resonance imaging , psychiatry , biology , philosophy , botany , germination , physics , epistemology , quantum mechanics , perception , mathematics education
Sense of agency refers to the feeling of control over one's actions, and their consequences. It involves both predictive processes linked to action control, and retrospective 'sense-making' causal inferences. Schizophrenia has been associated with impaired predictive processing, but the underlying mechanisms that impair patients' sense of agency remain unclear. We introduce a new 'prospective' aspect of agency and show that subliminally priming an action not only influences response times, but also influences reported sense of agency over subsequent action outcomes. This effect of priming was associated with altered connectivity between frontal areas and the angular gyrus. The effects on response times and on frontal action selection mechanisms were similar in patients with schizophrenia and in healthy volunteers. However, patients showed no effects of priming on sense of agency, no priming-related activation of angular gyrus, and no priming-related changes in fronto-parietal connectivity. We suggest angular gyrus activation reflects the experiences of agency, or non-agency, in part by processing action selection signals generated in the frontal lobes. The altered action awareness that characterizes schizophrenia may be due to impaired communication between these areas.
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