What over When in causal agency: Causal experience prioritizes outcome prediction over temporal priority

Conscious Cogn. 2022 Sep:104:103378. doi: 10.1016/j.concog.2022.103378. Epub 2022 Aug 5.

Abstract

Prior expectations strongly structure the way we perceive the world and ourselves. For instance, action-outcome prediction can modulate time perception and causal experience. We designed a study that allowed us to investigate whether action-outcome prediction has similar effects on time perception and intentional causality. Participants viewed a stimulus that was consistent or inconsistent with the action they, or another agent executed. The stimulus preceded or followed these actions and participants reported simultaneity or causal judgments. Observers were more likely to report the consistent outcomes as being generated by the action, even when the outcomes actually preceded the action. However, outcome consistency did not modulate simultaneity judgments. These results shed insight on the relationship between time and causal experience. It suggests that time perception and causal experience do not rely in the same way on temporal information, the latter being more permeable to contextual cues such as action-outcome consistency.

Keywords: Action-outcome consistency; Action-outcome prediction; Causality; Sense of agency; Simultaneity perception.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Causality
  • Humans
  • Judgment
  • Psychomotor Performance*
  • Time
  • Time Perception*