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The Readiness Potential reflects the internal source of action, rather than decision uncertainty

Eoin Travers, Patrick Haggard

2020European Journal of Neuroscience22 citationsDOI

Abstract

Voluntary actions are preceded by a Readiness Potential (RP), a slow EEG (electroencephalogram) component generated in medial frontal cortical areas. The RP is classically thought to be specific to internally-driven decisions to act, and to reflect post-decision motor preparation. Recent work suggests instead that it may reflect noise or conflict during the decision itself, with internally driven decisions tending to be more random, more conflicted and thus more uncertain than externally driven actions. To contrast accounts based on endogenicity with accounts based on uncertainty, we recorded EEG in a task where participants decided to act or withhold action to accept or reject visually presented gambles, and used multivariate methods to extract an RP-like component. We found no difference in amplitude of this component between actions driven by strong versus weak evidence, suggesting that the RP may not reflect uncertainty. In contrast, the same RP-like component showed higher amplitudes prior to actions performed without any external evidence (guesses) than for actions performed in response to equivocal, conflicting evidence. This supports the view that the RP reflects the internal source of action, rather than decision uncertainty.

Topics & Concepts

Action (physics)ElectroencephalographyPsychologyVoluntary actionContrast (vision)Cognitive psychologyComponent (thermodynamics)Late positive componentSocial psychologyPerceptionComputer scienceEvent-related potentialNeuroscienceArtificial intelligenceQuantum mechanicsPhysicsThermodynamicsNeural and Behavioral Psychology StudiesFree Will and AgencyPsychology of Moral and Emotional Judgment
The Readiness Potential reflects the internal source of action, rather than decision uncertainty | Litcius