Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6824013 | Schizophrenia Research | 2015 | 4 Pages |
Abstract
People usually experience agency over their actions and subsequent outcomes. These agency inferences over action-outcomes are essential to social interaction, and occur when an actual outcome corresponds with either a specific goal (goal-based), and matches with action-outcome information that is subtly pre-activated in the situation at hand (prime-based). Recent research showed that schizophrenia patients exhibit goal-based inferences, but not prime-based inferences. Intrigued by these findings, and underscoring their potential role in explaining poor social functioning, we replicate patients' deficit in prime-based agency inferences. Additionally, we exclude the account that patients are unable to visually process and attend to primed information.
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Authors
Robert A. Renes, Anouk van der Weiden, Merel Prikken, René S. Kahn, Henk Aarts, Neeltje E.M. van Haren,