Do We See It or Not? Sensory Attenuation in the Visual Domain

被引:49
作者
Schwarz, Katharina A. [1 ]
Pfister, Roland [1 ]
Kluge, Michel [1 ]
Weller, Lisa [1 ]
Kunde, Wilfried [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Wurzburg, Dept Psychol, Wurzburg, Germany
关键词
sensory attenuation; visual domain; action effects; perception and action; replication; RESPONSE-EFFECT COMPATIBILITY; CONFIDENCE-INTERVALS; SELF; PERCEPTION; CONSEQUENCES; STIMULI; PREDICTION; AGENCY; SCHIZOPHRENIA; SUPPRESSION;
D O I
10.1037/xge0000353
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Sensory consequences of an agent's actions are perceived less intensely than sensory stimuli that are not caused (and thus not predicted) by the observer. This effect of sensory attenuation has been discussed as a key principle of perception, potentially mediating various crucial functions such as agency and the discrimination of self-caused sensory stimulation from stimuli caused by external factors. Precise models describe the theoretical underpinnings of this phenomenon across a variety of modalities, especially the auditory, tactile, and visual domain. Despite these strong claims, empirical evidence for sensory attenuation in the visual domain is surprisingly sparse and ambiguous. In the present article, the authors therefore aim to clarify the role of sensory attenuation for learned visual action effects. To this end, the authors present a comprehensive replication effort including 3 separate, high-powered experiments on sensory attenuation in the visual domain with 1 direct and 2 preregistered, conceptual replication attempts of an influential study on this topic (Cardoso-Leite et al., 2010). Signal detection analyses were targeted to distinguish between true visual sensitivity and response bias. Contrary to previous assumptions and despite high statistical power, however, the authors found no evidence for sensory attenuation of learned visual action effects. Bayesian analyses further supported the null hypothesis of no effect, thus constraining theories that promote sensory attenuation as an immediate and necessary consequence of voluntary actions.
引用
收藏
页码:418 / 430
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
[31]   Do we know others' visual liking? [J].
Niimi, Ryosuke ;
Watanabe, Katsumi .
I-PERCEPTION, 2014, 5 (07) :572-584
[32]   The role of sensory attenuation in symptomatic and healthy individuals: a scoping review [J].
Rossi, Luca ;
Cerritelli, Francesco ;
Thacker, Mick ;
Esteves, Jorge E. .
FRONTIERS IN NEUROSCIENCE, 2025, 19
[33]   Attention Wins over Sensory Attenuation in a Sound Detection Task [J].
Cao, Liyu ;
Gross, Joachim .
PLOS ONE, 2015, 10 (08)
[34]   Agency dynamics in Tourette Syndrome: What do we know? [J].
Curtis-Wendlandt, Lisa .
PHENOMENOLOGY AND THE COGNITIVE SCIENCES, 2025,
[35]   Sensory attenuation from action observation [J].
Scott, Mark .
EXPERIMENTAL BRAIN RESEARCH, 2022, 240 (11) :2923-2937
[36]   Active inference, sensory attenuation and illusions [J].
Harriet Brown ;
Rick A. Adams ;
Isabel Parees ;
Mark Edwards ;
Karl Friston .
Cognitive Processing, 2013, 14 :411-427
[37]   Mechanisms of Intentional Binding and Sensory Attenuation: The Role of Temporal Prediction, Temporal Control, Identity Prediction, and Motor Prediction [J].
Hughes, Gethin ;
Desantis, Andrea ;
Waszak, Florian .
PSYCHOLOGICAL BULLETIN, 2013, 139 (01) :133-151
[38]   Why we see things the way we do: evidence for a wholly empirical strategy of vision [J].
Purves, D ;
Lotto, RB ;
Williams, SM ;
Nundy, S ;
Yang, ZY .
PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF LONDON SERIES B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2001, 356 (1407) :285-297
[39]   How do we see art: an eye-tracker study [J].
Quiroga, Rodrigo Quian ;
Pedreira, Carlos .
FRONTIERS IN HUMAN NEUROSCIENCE, 2011, 5
[40]   COVID-19 therapies: do we see substantial progress? [J].
Matusewicz, Lucyna ;
Golec, Marlena ;
Czogalla, Aleksander ;
Kuliczkowski, Kazimierz ;
Konka, Adam ;
Zembala-John, Joanna ;
Sikorski, Aleksander F. .
CELLULAR & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY LETTERS, 2022, 27 (01)