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