Does the mere presence of the things we have tended to influence our actions systematically, in ways that escape our awareness? For example, while entering a tool shed, does perceiving objects that we once tended to (e.g., tools, musical instruments) influence how we then execute a simple action (e.g., flicking the shed¿s light switch)? Ancient traditions (e.g., feng shui) and contemporary approaches to action production (e.g., continuous flow and cascade models) hypothesize that the answer is yes. Although relevant to several fields (e.g., motor cognition, social cognition), for various reasons this hypothesis cannot be tested by traditional choiceresponse time interference paradigms, which involve more complex processes than our tool shed...
Recent theories have stressed the role of effect anticipation in action control. Such a mechanism re...
Several theories of the mechanisms linking perception and action require that the links are bidirect...
Item does not contain fulltextIn three experiments we investigated how people determine whether or n...
Does the mere presence of the things we have tended to influence our actions systematically, in ways...
In a series of three experiments requiring selection of real objects for action, we investigated whe...
Human attention is partly under voluntary control, and partly under involuntary control. (Posner &am...
Human actions are guided either by endogenous action plans or by external stimuli in the environment...
Several theories of the mechanisms linking perception and action require that the links are bidirect...
Sense of control refers to one’s feelings to control environmental events through one’s own action. ...
Studies are reviewed regarding the influence of attention capture (in either an endogenous or an exo...
Automatic acquisition of action effect associations may serve as a parsimonious account of how peopl...
Automatic acquisition of action effect associations may serve as a parsimonious account of how peopl...
This article explored the extent to which stimulus-driven control over visual selection is modulated...
A central question within the domain of human cognition is whether or not the ability to replace a c...
We discuss evidence indicating that human visual attention is strongly modulated by the potential of...
Recent theories have stressed the role of effect anticipation in action control. Such a mechanism re...
Several theories of the mechanisms linking perception and action require that the links are bidirect...
Item does not contain fulltextIn three experiments we investigated how people determine whether or n...
Does the mere presence of the things we have tended to influence our actions systematically, in ways...
In a series of three experiments requiring selection of real objects for action, we investigated whe...
Human attention is partly under voluntary control, and partly under involuntary control. (Posner &am...
Human actions are guided either by endogenous action plans or by external stimuli in the environment...
Several theories of the mechanisms linking perception and action require that the links are bidirect...
Sense of control refers to one’s feelings to control environmental events through one’s own action. ...
Studies are reviewed regarding the influence of attention capture (in either an endogenous or an exo...
Automatic acquisition of action effect associations may serve as a parsimonious account of how peopl...
Automatic acquisition of action effect associations may serve as a parsimonious account of how peopl...
This article explored the extent to which stimulus-driven control over visual selection is modulated...
A central question within the domain of human cognition is whether or not the ability to replace a c...
We discuss evidence indicating that human visual attention is strongly modulated by the potential of...
Recent theories have stressed the role of effect anticipation in action control. Such a mechanism re...
Several theories of the mechanisms linking perception and action require that the links are bidirect...
Item does not contain fulltextIn three experiments we investigated how people determine whether or n...