TY - JOUR
T1 - Cognitive and neural components of the phenomenology of agency
AU - Morsella, Ezequiel
AU - Berger, Christopher C.
AU - Krieger, Stephen C.
PY - 2011/6
Y1 - 2011/6
N2 - A primary aspect of the self is the sense of agency - the sense that one is causing an action. In the spirit of recent reductionistic approaches to other complex, multifaceted phenomena (e.g., working memory; cf. Johnson & Johnson, 2009), we attempt to unravel the sense of agency by investigating its most basic components, without invoking high-level conceptual or 'central executive' processes. After considering the high-level components of agency, we examine the cognitive and neural underpinnings of its low-level components, which include basic consciousness and subjective urges (e.g., the urge to breathe when holding one's breath). Regarding urges, a quantitative review revealed that certain inter-representational dynamics (conflicts between action plans, as when holding one's breath) reliably engender fundamental aspects both of the phenomenology of agency and of 'something countering the will of the self'. The neural correlates of such dynamics, for both primordial urges (e.g., air hunger) and urges elicited in laboratory interference tasks, are entertained. In addition, we discuss the implications of this unique perspective for the study of disorders involving agency.
AB - A primary aspect of the self is the sense of agency - the sense that one is causing an action. In the spirit of recent reductionistic approaches to other complex, multifaceted phenomena (e.g., working memory; cf. Johnson & Johnson, 2009), we attempt to unravel the sense of agency by investigating its most basic components, without invoking high-level conceptual or 'central executive' processes. After considering the high-level components of agency, we examine the cognitive and neural underpinnings of its low-level components, which include basic consciousness and subjective urges (e.g., the urge to breathe when holding one's breath). Regarding urges, a quantitative review revealed that certain inter-representational dynamics (conflicts between action plans, as when holding one's breath) reliably engender fundamental aspects both of the phenomenology of agency and of 'something countering the will of the self'. The neural correlates of such dynamics, for both primordial urges (e.g., air hunger) and urges elicited in laboratory interference tasks, are entertained. In addition, we discuss the implications of this unique perspective for the study of disorders involving agency.
KW - Cognitive
KW - Conscious conflict
KW - Phenomenology of agency
KW - Self consciousness
KW - Sense of agency
KW - Volition
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=79959287945&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/13554794.2010.504727
DO - 10.1080/13554794.2010.504727
M3 - Review article
C2 - 20830644
AN - SCOPUS:79959287945
SN - 1355-4794
VL - 17
SP - 209
EP - 230
JO - Neurocase
JF - Neurocase
IS - 3
ER -