Imagery research has identified two main visual perspectives, external visual imagery (EVI, third person) and internal visual imagery (IVI, first person). Based upon findings from brain imaging literature showing that different neural substrates are recruited for IVI and EVI perspectives, and that IVI activates motor system brain areas, we hypothesised that a concurrent action dual task would cause greater interference in performance for IVI than EVI. In a first experiment, participants were allocated to either an IVI or an EVI group, and were tasked with moving an onscreen marker towards a target in three blocked conditions: imagery, imagery with a concurrent motor dual-task of sequencing, and a math control. An interaction between imagery...
We report three experiments investigating the hypothesis that use of internal visual imagery (IVI) w...
Motor imagery requires the covert execution of a movement without any overt motor output. Previous s...
D'Aquino A, Frank C, Hagan Junior JE, Schack T. Eye movements during motor imagery and execution rev...
Imagery research has identified two main visual perspectives, External Visual Imagery (EVI, third-pe...
Research highlights that internal visual, external visual and kinesthetic imagery differentially eff...
Research highlights that internal visual, external visual and kinesthetic imagery differentially eff...
There is strong evidence that focussing on the goal of an action improves performance relative to fo...
The concept of shared motor representations between action execution and various covert conditions h...
Imagery is the psychological technique most-widely used by athletes, but researchers do not know how...
The dual-action simulation hypothesis proposes that both an observed and an imagined action can be r...
A currently influential theory of human vision (Milner & Goodale, 1995) posits the existence of two ...
Neuroimaging studies have shown that the neural mechanisms of motor imagery (MI) overlap substantial...
Mental imagery is a cognitive process crucial to human reasoning. Numerous studies have characterize...
We report three experiments investigating the hypothesis that use of internal visual imagery (IVI) w...
AbstractNeuroimaging studies have shown that the neural mechanisms of motor imagery (MI) overlap sub...
We report three experiments investigating the hypothesis that use of internal visual imagery (IVI) w...
Motor imagery requires the covert execution of a movement without any overt motor output. Previous s...
D'Aquino A, Frank C, Hagan Junior JE, Schack T. Eye movements during motor imagery and execution rev...
Imagery research has identified two main visual perspectives, External Visual Imagery (EVI, third-pe...
Research highlights that internal visual, external visual and kinesthetic imagery differentially eff...
Research highlights that internal visual, external visual and kinesthetic imagery differentially eff...
There is strong evidence that focussing on the goal of an action improves performance relative to fo...
The concept of shared motor representations between action execution and various covert conditions h...
Imagery is the psychological technique most-widely used by athletes, but researchers do not know how...
The dual-action simulation hypothesis proposes that both an observed and an imagined action can be r...
A currently influential theory of human vision (Milner & Goodale, 1995) posits the existence of two ...
Neuroimaging studies have shown that the neural mechanisms of motor imagery (MI) overlap substantial...
Mental imagery is a cognitive process crucial to human reasoning. Numerous studies have characterize...
We report three experiments investigating the hypothesis that use of internal visual imagery (IVI) w...
AbstractNeuroimaging studies have shown that the neural mechanisms of motor imagery (MI) overlap sub...
We report three experiments investigating the hypothesis that use of internal visual imagery (IVI) w...
Motor imagery requires the covert execution of a movement without any overt motor output. Previous s...
D'Aquino A, Frank C, Hagan Junior JE, Schack T. Eye movements during motor imagery and execution rev...