RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Compress global, dilate local: Intentional binding in action-outcome alternations JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 507582 DO 10.1101/507582 A1 Shu Imaizumi A1 Yoshihiko Tanno A1 Hiroshi Imamizu YR 2018 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2018/12/28/507582.abstract AB Perceived temporal interval between voluntary action and its outcome is shorter than that between involuntary action and its outcome (i.e., intentional binding). Although the effect is robust and extensively employed as a marker of sense of agency, the nature of intentional binding in multiple actions and outcomes remains unclear. We examined intentional binding in alternated action-outcome dyads. Participants actively or passively pressed a key, followed by a tone, and they again pressed the same key immediately after the preceding tone; resulting in four keypress-tone dyads in a trial. Participants reproduced the duration of alternated keypress-tone dyads or the temporal interval between a dyad embedded in the alternations. The reproduced duration was shorter in the active than in the passive condition, suggesting the intentional binding in action-outcome alternations. In contrast, the reproduced interval between a dyad was longer in the active condition and did not correlate with the reproduced duration of the alternations. These results suggest that subjective time during actions may rely not only on a general internal clock; rather, it may also be modulated by postdictive biases that are flexibly switched based on what we recall.