Active sensing refers to the concept of animals perceiving their environment while involving self-initiated motor acts. As a consequence of these motor acts, this activity produces direct and timely changes in the sensory surface. Is the brain able to take advantage of the precise time-locking that occurs during active sensing? Is the intrinsic predictability present during active sensing, impacting the sensory processes? We conjecture that if stimuli presentation is evoked by a self-initiated motor act, sensory discrimination and timing accuracy would improve. We studied this phenomenon when rats had to locate the position of a brief light stimulus, either when it was elicited by a warning light [passive condition (PC)] or when it was gene...
A substantial portion of our sensory experience happens during active behaviors such as walking arou...
Determining if we, or another agent, were responsible for a sensory event can require an accurate se...
Tomassini A, Gori M, Burr D, Sandini G, Morrone MC. Active movement restores veridical event-timing ...
Active sensing refers to the concept of animals perceiving their environment while involving self-in...
Active sensing refers to the concept of animals perceiving their environment while involving self-in...
Active sensing refers to the concept of animals perceiving their environment while involving self-in...
Active sensing refers to the concept of animals perceiving their environment while involving self-in...
YesBackground: Our motor actions normally generate sensory events, but how do we know which events w...
It is well known that the motor and the sensory systems structure sensory data collection and cooper...
It has been widely assumed that internal forward models use efference copies to create predictions a...
International audienceIn temporal-or dynamic-attending theory, it is proposed that motor activity he...
The ability to accurately determine when to perform actions is a fundamental function of the nervous...
AbstractSpontaneous oscillations of brain activity can be synchronized by external stimuli, or by al...
Sensory consequences of one's own action are often perceived as less intense, and lead to reduced ne...
Several lines of evidence suggest that motoric brain structures may form the core amodal component o...
A substantial portion of our sensory experience happens during active behaviors such as walking arou...
Determining if we, or another agent, were responsible for a sensory event can require an accurate se...
Tomassini A, Gori M, Burr D, Sandini G, Morrone MC. Active movement restores veridical event-timing ...
Active sensing refers to the concept of animals perceiving their environment while involving self-in...
Active sensing refers to the concept of animals perceiving their environment while involving self-in...
Active sensing refers to the concept of animals perceiving their environment while involving self-in...
Active sensing refers to the concept of animals perceiving their environment while involving self-in...
YesBackground: Our motor actions normally generate sensory events, but how do we know which events w...
It is well known that the motor and the sensory systems structure sensory data collection and cooper...
It has been widely assumed that internal forward models use efference copies to create predictions a...
International audienceIn temporal-or dynamic-attending theory, it is proposed that motor activity he...
The ability to accurately determine when to perform actions is a fundamental function of the nervous...
AbstractSpontaneous oscillations of brain activity can be synchronized by external stimuli, or by al...
Sensory consequences of one's own action are often perceived as less intense, and lead to reduced ne...
Several lines of evidence suggest that motoric brain structures may form the core amodal component o...
A substantial portion of our sensory experience happens during active behaviors such as walking arou...
Determining if we, or another agent, were responsible for a sensory event can require an accurate se...
Tomassini A, Gori M, Burr D, Sandini G, Morrone MC. Active movement restores veridical event-timing ...