Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

A reduction in the implicit sense of agency during adolescence compared to childhood and adulthood

View through CrossRef
Sense of agency (SoA), the fundamental feeling of control over our actions and their consequences, may show key developmental changes during adolescence. We examined SoA in childhood (9-10), mid-adolescence (13-14), late-adolescence (18-20) and adulthood (25-28) using two tasks (Libet Clock and Stream of Letters). SoA was implicitly indexed by intentional binding that reflects the agency effect on action-outcome temporal association. We found age effects on the sub-processes in both tasks. In the Libet Clock task, where performance was more reliable, we observed a U-shaped developmental trajectory of intentional binding suggesting an adolescent-specific reduction in the experience of control. This study provides evidence for the developmental effects on the implicit agency experience and suggests adolescence as a critical period. Our findings may have implications for understanding increased risk-taking behaviour and greater vulnerability for agency related disorders such as schizophrenia during adolescence.
Center for Open Science
Title: A reduction in the implicit sense of agency during adolescence compared to childhood and adulthood
Description:
Sense of agency (SoA), the fundamental feeling of control over our actions and their consequences, may show key developmental changes during adolescence.
We examined SoA in childhood (9-10), mid-adolescence (13-14), late-adolescence (18-20) and adulthood (25-28) using two tasks (Libet Clock and Stream of Letters).
SoA was implicitly indexed by intentional binding that reflects the agency effect on action-outcome temporal association.
We found age effects on the sub-processes in both tasks.
In the Libet Clock task, where performance was more reliable, we observed a U-shaped developmental trajectory of intentional binding suggesting an adolescent-specific reduction in the experience of control.
This study provides evidence for the developmental effects on the implicit agency experience and suggests adolescence as a critical period.
Our findings may have implications for understanding increased risk-taking behaviour and greater vulnerability for agency related disorders such as schizophrenia during adolescence.

Related Results

Are Cervical Ribs Indicators of Childhood Cancer? A Narrative Review
Are Cervical Ribs Indicators of Childhood Cancer? A Narrative Review
Abstract A cervical rib (CR), also known as a supernumerary or extra rib, is an additional rib that forms above the first rib, resulting from the overgrowth of the transverse proce...
Adolescent Obesity, Change in Weight Status, and Hypertension
Adolescent Obesity, Change in Weight Status, and Hypertension
We sought to determine whether change in weight status between adolescence and young adulthood was associated with the risk of developing hypertension among adolescents and whether...
Explicit and Implicit Sense of Agency in Depersonalization Experiences
Explicit and Implicit Sense of Agency in Depersonalization Experiences
The sense of agency, i.e. the subjective feeling of voluntarily controlling one’s bodily actions is profoundly altered in Depersonalisation (DP henceforth), a condition that makes ...
The impact of idiopathic childhood‐onset growth hormone deficiency (GHD) on bone mass in subjects without adult GHD
The impact of idiopathic childhood‐onset growth hormone deficiency (GHD) on bone mass in subjects without adult GHD
Summaryobjective  Despite seemingly adequate growth hormone (GH) treatment during childhood, children with GH deficiency (GHD) have reduced bone mineral density (BMD) at final heig...
ISFAA : Implicit SPH for astrophysical apllications
ISFAA : Implicit SPH for astrophysical apllications
Computational simulation is one of the basic techniques of modern Astrophysics. The long-term time astrophysical processes cannot be treated with explicit approaches because that t...
Resting-state and Task-related Cortical Activities Predict Sense of Ownership and Agency: An Explorative Tool-use Study
Resting-state and Task-related Cortical Activities Predict Sense of Ownership and Agency: An Explorative Tool-use Study
Prior research has highlighted that brain oscillations, particularly in the theta, alpha and beta frequency bands, are closely linked to the sense of ownership and agency in both p...
Unstable Sense of Agency under Consistent Force Feedback
Unstable Sense of Agency under Consistent Force Feedback
AbstractThe present study undertakes an ecological approach to haptic interfaces grounded in the sense of agency that accompanies human action. The study had two aims. The first ai...

Back to Top