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Functional and neurophysiological basis of voluntary action control: Behavioral, TMS, and EEG studies - VAC

Subject Area General, Cognitive and Mathematical Psychology
Term from 2009 to 2012
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 92505706
 
Humans either cany out actions to produce certain effects in the environment meant to meet the agent s goals; or they carry out actions to accommodate to environmental demands. The first type of action may be referred to as intention-based or voluntary, the latter kind may be referred to as stimulus-based or reactive.Recent research suggests that stimulus- and intention-based actions are controlled by different neural structures. Moreover, the two routes to action work in a different fashion: In the stimulus-based mode, subjects hand over control to the stimuli, in that the system merely acts reflexively upon presentation of a stimulus in a pre-specified way. In this mode, actions are selected with respect to their environmental sensory antecedents. In the intention-based mode, actions are guided by the ideomotor principle. According to the ideomotor theory, voluntary action control is based on learned associations between movements and their perceivable consequences. An intention-based action, so the ideomotor theory, can be triggered by anticipating these consequences.We will investigate the cognitive and neurophysiological basis of stimulus- and intention-based actions along three axes:• Mechanisms of intention-based action control and functional differences between intention- and stimulus-based actions.• Role of distal sensory consequences in intention-based action control.• Coordination of intention- and stimulus-based action.We will approach these issues with the help of techniques coming from two disciplines:• Experimental Psychology and psychophysics (reaction times, detection thresholds).• Neurophysiology (transcranial magnet stimulation [TMS], event-related potentials [ERPs])Our goals are:• to investigate the functional an neurophysiological underpinnings of action control.• to devise and implement new neuroscientific techniques opening up further sophisticated investigation of the topic.• to establish a research axis CNRS LPP / MPI CBS on the topic of neurofunctional antecedents of action control.Because the concept of voluntary action is so pervasive in human sciences, the research will also have wider impact on ethical (accountability) and philosophical issues (free will). Moreover focusing on the sensorimotor basis of voluntary action may help to bridge scientific approaches that are common in health, social, and personality psychology.
DFG Programme Research Grants
International Connection France
Participating Person Professor Dr. Florian Waszak
 
 

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