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Sensorimotor coordination generates extended agency
Institution:1. School of Mechanical and Electrical Engineering, China University of Mining and Technology, Xuzhou, China;2. Department of Mechanical Engineering, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China;1. Complex Systems Theory Department, Institute of Nuclear Physics, Polish Academy of Sciences, PL-31-342 Kraków, Poland;2. Department of Computer Science, College of Engineering, Mathematics and Physical Sciences, University of Exeter, Exeter EX4 4QF, UK;3. Faculty of Physics, Mathematics and Computer Science, Cracow University of Technology, PL-31-155 Kraków, Poland
Abstract:When we synchronize finger tapping with a visual metronome, we experience a strikingly robust phenomenon of extended agency known as Spizzo’s effect. This effect is the compelling sense that we are controlling the metronome. The effect arises even though the agent knows that the metronome operates autonomously. We propose that the extended agency here established over metronome pulses results from sensorimotor coordination. To test this hypothesis, we operationalize sensorimotor coordination in terms of the correlation structures in series of asynchronies or reaction times from two finger-tapping tasks. Analyses reveal that, whereas correlation structures vary across individuals and show a systematic drift towards nonstationarity with increasing metronome frequency conditions, the presence of correlation structure is co-extensive with Spizzo’s effect. We interpret this result as supporting the view that extended agency relies on sensorimotor coordination. Sensorimotor coordination, we suggest, may induce the effect by integrating the perception of visual pulses and the agency over tapping into a synesthetic experience.
Keywords:Spizzo's effect  Extended agency  Sensorimotor coordination  Finger tapping  Fractal classification
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