Individuals from diverse disciplines, including neurology, physiology, psychology, mathematics, and engineering have contributed to this volume. Their scientific investigations of volitional action are part of the resurgence of interest in the psychology and physiology of volition which has taken place in recent years. The book comprises a significant sample of their observations, both rational and empirical, which have new practical implications for our understanding of human conduct.
The book was designed to serve a threefold purpose: a) to consolidate the gains of the various scholars, relatively isolated in their respective disciplines, b) to foster and help focus future research on conation and self-control and c) to provide practitioners in applied psychology with a broad-based tutorial.
General Theoretical Perspective The Synergy of Voluntary and Involuntary Action Volition: a Semi-Scientific Essay On the Will: An Historical Perspective
Physiological Perspective Volitional Eye Movements and their Relationship to Visual Attention The Cerebral Correlates of Reaching Will, Volitional Action, Attention and Cerebral Potentials in Man: Bereitschaftspotentail, Performance-Related Potentials, Directed Attention Potential, EEG Spectrum Changes Cortical Modification of Sensorimotor Linkages in Relation to Intended Action Cerebral Correlates of Auditory Attention The Physiological Stress of Thwarted Intentions
Systems-Modeling Perspective A Control-Theory Analysis of Interference During Social Tracking VITE and FLETE: Neural Modules for Trajectory Formation and Postural Control Behavior in the First Degree Quantitative Measurement of Volition: a Pilot Study
Psychological Perspective Some Experimental Investigations of Volition Control Theory and Psychology: a Tool for Integration and a Heuristilƒ9