Abstract
Self-agency is a crucial aspect of self-awareness. It is underresearched given the phenomenon’s subjectivity and difficulty of study. It is particularly underresearched comparatively, given that animals cannot receive agency instructions or make agency declarations. Accordingly, we developed a distinctively new self-agency paradigm. Humans and rhesus macaques learned event categories differentiated by whether the participant’s volitional response controlled a screen launch. They learned by trial and error after minimal instructions with no agency orientation (humans) or no instructions (monkeys). After learning, humans’ verbalized category descriptions were coded for self-agency attributions. Across three experiments, humans’ agency attributions qualitatively improved discrimination performance—participants not invoking self-agency rarely exceeded chance performance. It also produced a diagnostic latency profile: classification accuracy depended heavily on the temporal relationship between the button-press and the launch, but only for those invoking agency. In our last experiment, monkeys performed the launch task. Their performance and latency profiles mirrored that of humans. Thus, self-agency can be self-discovered as a frame organizing discrimination. And it may be used as a discrimination cue by some nonhuman animals as well.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 1901-1917 |
| Number of pages | 17 |
| Journal | Journal of Experimental Psychology: General |
| Volume | 150 |
| Issue number | 9 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - 2021 |
Keywords
- Agency
- Categorization
- Comparative cognition
- Discrimination learning
- Self-awareness
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