ABSTRACT. Historically, movement noise or variability is con-sidered to be an undesirable property of biological motor systems. In particular, noise is typically assumed to degrade the emergence and stability of rhythmic motor synchronization. Recently, how-ever, it has been suggested that small levels of noise might actu-ally improve the functioning of motor systems and facilitate their adaptation to environmental events. Here, the authors investigated whether noise can facilitate spontaneous rhythmic visuomotor synchronization. They examined the influence of internal noise in the rhythmic limb movements of participants and external noise in the movement of an oscillating visual stimulus on the occurrence of spontaneous synchronization. By...
Interpersonal coordination in musical ensembles often involves multisensory cues, with visual inform...
Contains fulltext : 150710.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)It is well know...
Abstract When a slowly moving pattern is presented on a monitor which itself is moved, the pattern a...
Human motor behavior is often characterized by long-range, slowly decaying serial correlations or 1/...
The variability of single and coupled rhythmic limb movements is assumed to be a consequence of the ...
Interpersonal coordination in musical ensembles often involves multisensory cues, with visual inform...
Abstract The current studies explore the informational basis of the coupling in human rhythmic movem...
In this article both movement errors and successful movements are considered to be the product of va...
Humans tend to spontaneously align their movements in response to visual (e.g., swinging pendulum) a...
When an actor performs a rhythmic limb movement while observing a spatially incongruent movement he ...
The capacity for auditory-motor coordination (AMC) is shared by several species, among which humans ...
When an actor performs a rhythmic limb movement while observing a spatially incongruent movement he ...
Noisy galvanic vestibular stimulation (nGVS) has been shown to improve dynamic walking stability, af...
Evidence from human neuroimaging and animal electrophysiological studies suggests that signals from ...
International audienceIn physics “entrainment” refers to the synchronization of two coupled oscillat...
Interpersonal coordination in musical ensembles often involves multisensory cues, with visual inform...
Contains fulltext : 150710.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)It is well know...
Abstract When a slowly moving pattern is presented on a monitor which itself is moved, the pattern a...
Human motor behavior is often characterized by long-range, slowly decaying serial correlations or 1/...
The variability of single and coupled rhythmic limb movements is assumed to be a consequence of the ...
Interpersonal coordination in musical ensembles often involves multisensory cues, with visual inform...
Abstract The current studies explore the informational basis of the coupling in human rhythmic movem...
In this article both movement errors and successful movements are considered to be the product of va...
Humans tend to spontaneously align their movements in response to visual (e.g., swinging pendulum) a...
When an actor performs a rhythmic limb movement while observing a spatially incongruent movement he ...
The capacity for auditory-motor coordination (AMC) is shared by several species, among which humans ...
When an actor performs a rhythmic limb movement while observing a spatially incongruent movement he ...
Noisy galvanic vestibular stimulation (nGVS) has been shown to improve dynamic walking stability, af...
Evidence from human neuroimaging and animal electrophysiological studies suggests that signals from ...
International audienceIn physics “entrainment” refers to the synchronization of two coupled oscillat...
Interpersonal coordination in musical ensembles often involves multisensory cues, with visual inform...
Contains fulltext : 150710.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)It is well know...
Abstract When a slowly moving pattern is presented on a monitor which itself is moved, the pattern a...