AbstractWe investigated the effect of action performance on perceptual judgments by evaluating accuracy in judging whether doorways allowed passage. Participants made judgments either before or after walking through doorways of varying widths. Participants in the action-first group benefited from action feedback and made more accurate judgments compared to a perception-first group that judged doorways before walking through them. Action feedback aided perceptual judgments by facilitating scaling to body dimensions: Judgments in the action-first group were strongly related to height, weight, and torso size, whereas judgments in the perception-first group were not
Changes in the body over developmental time (e.g., physical growth) as well as over shorter timescal...
Recent research (Hajnal et al. in Perception 45(7):768–786, 2016) found apparent differences between...
The embodied cognition approach to perception suggests that spatial perception involves the integrat...
AbstractWe investigated the effect of action performance on perceptual judgments by evaluating accur...
Perception and action are tightly coupled and previous studies have demonstrated that action experie...
Studies have shown information specifying some affordances may be faster or easier to perceive than ...
Studies on affordance perception commonly report systematic errors; a finding that is at odds with t...
How deep is the linkage between action and perception? Much is known about how object perception imp...
Recalibration of affordance perception allows observers to adapt to changes in the body's size or ab...
In 2 experiments, participants made judgments of their own maximum sitting height. During judgments,...
The role of perceptual-motor experience in affordance perception is fundamental in understanding the...
Prior work shows that the calibration of perception and action transfers between actions depending o...
Perspective taking and judging affordances share similar functional goals when determining whether a...
Ecological psychology views goal-directed behavior as a process by which a cognitive operation, an i...
Successful object-oriented action typically increases the perceived size of aimed target objects. Th...
Changes in the body over developmental time (e.g., physical growth) as well as over shorter timescal...
Recent research (Hajnal et al. in Perception 45(7):768–786, 2016) found apparent differences between...
The embodied cognition approach to perception suggests that spatial perception involves the integrat...
AbstractWe investigated the effect of action performance on perceptual judgments by evaluating accur...
Perception and action are tightly coupled and previous studies have demonstrated that action experie...
Studies have shown information specifying some affordances may be faster or easier to perceive than ...
Studies on affordance perception commonly report systematic errors; a finding that is at odds with t...
How deep is the linkage between action and perception? Much is known about how object perception imp...
Recalibration of affordance perception allows observers to adapt to changes in the body's size or ab...
In 2 experiments, participants made judgments of their own maximum sitting height. During judgments,...
The role of perceptual-motor experience in affordance perception is fundamental in understanding the...
Prior work shows that the calibration of perception and action transfers between actions depending o...
Perspective taking and judging affordances share similar functional goals when determining whether a...
Ecological psychology views goal-directed behavior as a process by which a cognitive operation, an i...
Successful object-oriented action typically increases the perceived size of aimed target objects. Th...
Changes in the body over developmental time (e.g., physical growth) as well as over shorter timescal...
Recent research (Hajnal et al. in Perception 45(7):768–786, 2016) found apparent differences between...
The embodied cognition approach to perception suggests that spatial perception involves the integrat...