About this Research Topic
Despite this progress there remain a number of outstanding questions such as:
• Are there cross-cultural differences in the sense of agency?
• How does the sense of agency develop in infants or change across the lifespan?
• How does social context influence sense of agency?
• What neural networks support sense of agency (i.e., connectivity and communication between brain regions)?
• What are the temporal dynamics with respect to neural processes underlying the sense of agency (i.e. the what and when of agency processing)?
• How can different cue models of the sense of agency be further specified and empirically supported, especially with regards to cue integration/ weighting?
• What are the applications of sense of agency research (clinically, engineering etc.)?
The concept of the sense of agency offers intriguing avenues for knowledge transfer across disciplines and interdisciplinary empirical approaches, especially in addressing the afore-mentioned outstanding questions. The aim of the present research topic is to promote and facilitate such interdisciplinarity for a better understanding of why and how we typically experience our own actions so naturally and undoubtedly as “ours” and what goes awry when we do not. We, thus, welcome contributions from, for example, (i) neuroscience and psychology (including development psychology/ neuroscience), (ii) psychiatry and neurology, (iii) philosophy, (iv) robotics, and (v) computational modeling. In addition to empirical or scientific studies of the sense of agency, we also encourage theoretical contributions including reviews, models, and opinions.
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.