Published: 14 July 2017Research has shown that infants are able to track a moving target efficiently - even if it is transiently occluded from sight. This basic ability allows prediction of when and where events happen in everyday life. Yet, it is unclear whether, and how, infants internally represent the time course of ongoing movements to derive predictions. In this study, 10-month-old crawlers observed the video of a same-aged crawling baby that was transiently occluded and reappeared in either a temporally continuous or non-continuous manner (i.e., delayed by 500 ms vs. forwarded by 500 ms relative to the real-time movement). Eye movement and rhythmic neural brain activity (EEG) were measured simultaneously. Eye movement analyses showed...
Abstract In order to understand how experience of an action alters functional brain responses to vis...
Distinguishing spurious correlations from unconfounded causal evidence is a challenge in every day r...
A popular idea in cognitive neuroscience is that to predict others’ actions, observers need to map t...
Research has shown that infants are able to track a moving target efficiently – even if it is transi...
Infants possess the remarkable capacity to perceive occluded movements as ongoing and coherent. Litt...
An essential function of the human visual system is to perceive natural scenes as coherent even if o...
Two experiments investigated how 16-20-week-old infants visually track an object that oscillated on ...
Contains fulltext : 89986.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Infants make p...
This thesis explored the development of infants’ ability to preserve spatio-temporal continuity of m...
Item does not contain fulltextInfants are sensitive to structure and patterns within continuous stre...
<div><p>Infants' poor motor abilities limit their interaction with their environment and render stud...
Infants' poor motor abilities limit their interaction with their environment and render studying inf...
When a moving object disappears behind an occluding surface, the prediction of its reappearance must...
When teaching infants new actions, parents tend to modify their movements. Infants prefer these infa...
Using eye tracking methodology, this thesis investigates if four-month-old infants can perceive shor...
Abstract In order to understand how experience of an action alters functional brain responses to vis...
Distinguishing spurious correlations from unconfounded causal evidence is a challenge in every day r...
A popular idea in cognitive neuroscience is that to predict others’ actions, observers need to map t...
Research has shown that infants are able to track a moving target efficiently – even if it is transi...
Infants possess the remarkable capacity to perceive occluded movements as ongoing and coherent. Litt...
An essential function of the human visual system is to perceive natural scenes as coherent even if o...
Two experiments investigated how 16-20-week-old infants visually track an object that oscillated on ...
Contains fulltext : 89986.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Infants make p...
This thesis explored the development of infants’ ability to preserve spatio-temporal continuity of m...
Item does not contain fulltextInfants are sensitive to structure and patterns within continuous stre...
<div><p>Infants' poor motor abilities limit their interaction with their environment and render stud...
Infants' poor motor abilities limit their interaction with their environment and render studying inf...
When a moving object disappears behind an occluding surface, the prediction of its reappearance must...
When teaching infants new actions, parents tend to modify their movements. Infants prefer these infa...
Using eye tracking methodology, this thesis investigates if four-month-old infants can perceive shor...
Abstract In order to understand how experience of an action alters functional brain responses to vis...
Distinguishing spurious correlations from unconfounded causal evidence is a challenge in every day r...
A popular idea in cognitive neuroscience is that to predict others’ actions, observers need to map t...