Intended emotions influence intentional binding with emotional faces: Larger binding for intended negative emotions |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Philosophy and History of Science, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Athens, Greece;2. Cognitive Systems Research Institute, Athens, Greece;3. Ernst Strüngmann Institute for Neuroscience in Cooperation with Max Planck Society, Frankfurt, Germany;4. Department of Psychology, Panteion University of Social and Political Sciences, Athens, Greece |
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Abstract: | The effect of emotions on Intentional binding (IB) is equivocal. In addition, most studies on IB have not manipulated emotional content of intentions. This study investigates the effect of intended and outcome emotions using emotional faces (happy or disgust face in experiment 1 and a happy or angry face in experiment 3). To see whether the effects are due to priming, we used instructions with a happy-disgust pair in experiment 2 and happy-angry pair in experiment 4. Outcome emotional faces were not predictable. Results showed that intending a negative emotional face resulted in shorter action-outcome interval judgments compared to a happy face irrespective of the emotional content of the outcome face. This effect was absent in experiments 2 and 4 with instructed emotions. In addition to showing the importance of having explicit intentions, the results show that emotional content of our intentions does influence IB possibly due to prospective mechanisms. |
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Keywords: | Intentional binding Sense of agency Emotional faces Valence Prospective mechanisms |
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