Biological Neuroscience readings
- Free will - Montague (2008,Current Biology) (Review of biology related free will literature)
- "Why should I care?" Challenging free will attenuates neural reaction to errors (Davide Rigoni, Gilles Pourtois, Marcel Brass , 2014, Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience)
- Demystifying “free will”: The role of contextual information and evidence accumulation for predictive brain activity (Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, 2014)
- The Inner Sense of Free Will:Conscious Intention and Neural Substrates - good review (thesis, 2014)
- The psychology of volition (Frith, 2013, Experimental Brain Research, IM2.0)
- Freedom, choice, and the sense of agency (Front Hum Neurosci. 2013)
- Editorial: Sense of agency: examining awareness of the acting self (Front. Hum. Neurosci., 2015)
- Free will decoded (European commission, 2015)
- Coercion Changes the Sense of Agency in the Human Brain (Current biology, 2016)
- A HTML5 open source tool to conduct studies based on Libet’s clock paradigm (Nature Scientific Reports, 2016)
- An fMRI investigation of the effects of belief in free will on third-party punishment (Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience , 2014)
- When errors do not matter: Weakening belief in intentional control impairs cognitive reaction to errors (Rigoni et al., 2013, Cognition)
- Brain correlates of subjective freedom of choice (Consciousness and Cognition, 2013)
- Demystifying “free will”: The role of contextual information and evidence accumulation for predictive brain activity (Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews. 2014)
- Addiction, Freedom, and Responsibility (AJOB Neuroscience, 2015)
- The Evolutionary Perspective on Free Will Might Be Mechanistic But Not Deterministic (AJOB Neuroscience, 2015)
- The influence of high-level beliefs on self-regulatory engagement: evidence from thermal pain stimulation (Frontiers in psychology, 2013)
- Exploring implicit and explicit aspects of sense of agency (Consciousness and Cognition, 2011)
- It’s OK if ‘my brain made me do it’: People’s intuitions about free will and neuroscientific prediction (Nahmiasa, Shepardc, & Reutere, Cognition, 2014)