4.6 Article

Illusion of control affects ERP amplitude reductions for auditory outcomes of self-generated actions

Journal

PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 58, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/psyp.13792

Keywords

auditory ERP; EEG; illusion of control; sense of agency; sensory prediction

Funding

  1. Projekt DEAL

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The reduced neural responses to self-generated stimuli compared to external stimuli are due to the matching of motor-based sensory predictions and sensory reafferences, helping to identify changes in the environment. The N1 amplitude reflects this matching process closely, while the P2/3a component is associated with judgments of agency and sensitive to contextual top-down information.
The reduction of neural responses to self-generated stimuli compared to external stimuli is thought to result from the matching of motor-based sensory predictions and sensory reafferences and to serve the identification of changes in the environment as caused by oneself. The amplitude of the auditory event-related potential (ERP) component N1 seems to closely reflect this matching process, while the later positive component (P2/ P3a) has been associated with judgments of agency, which are also sensitive to contextual top-down information. In this study, we examined the effect of perceived control over sound production on the processing of self-generated and external stimuli, as reflected in these components. We used a new version of a classic two-button choice task to induce different degrees of the illusion of control (IoC) and recorded ERPs for the processing of self-generated and external sounds in a subsequent task. N1 amplitudes were reduced for self-generated compared to external sounds, but not significantly affected by IoC. P2/3a amplitudes were affected by IoC: We found reduced P2/3a amplitudes after a high compared to a low IoC induction training, but only for self-generated, not for external sounds. These findings suggest that prior contextual belief information induced by an IoC affects later processing as reflected in the P2/P3a, possibly for the formation of agency judgments, while early processing reflecting motor-based predictions is not affected.

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