During social interactions, how do we predict what other people are going to do next? One view is that we use our own motor experience to simulate and predict other people's actions. For example, when we see Sally look at a coffee cup or grasp a hammer, our own motor system provides a signal that anticipates her next action. Previous research has typically examined such gaze and grasp-based simulation processes separately, and it is not known whether similar cognitive and brain systems underpin the perception of object-directed gaze and grasp. Here we use functional magnetic resonance imaging to examine to what extent gaze- and grasp-perception rely on common or distinct brain networks. Using a 'peeping window' protocol, we controlled what ...
Event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was used to explore how the human brain ...
International audienceBackgroundUnderstanding social interactions requires the ability to accurately...
Object grasping is fundamental to our interaction with the environment. To plan a grasp, the brain r...
During social interactions, how do we predict what other people are going to do next? One view is th...
Previous research has provided evidence for a neural system underlying the observation of another pe...
Consistent evidence suggests that the way we reach and grasp an object is modulated not only by obje...
<div><p>Understanding the intentions of others while watching their actions is a fundamental buildin...
Consistent evidence suggests that the way we reach and grasp an object is modulated not only by obje...
Previous behavioural and neuroimaging data on humans demonstrated that kinematics and the level of b...
Understanding the intentions of others while watching their actions is a fundamental building block ...
Understanding the intentions of others while watching their actions is a fundamental building block ...
Recent neuroimaging evidence in macaques has shown that the neural system underlying the observation...
Understanding the intentions of others while watching their actions is a fundamental building block ...
Previous neuroimaging research on healthy humans has provided evidence for a neural system underlyin...
We used fMRI to study the effect of hiding the target of a grasping action on the cerebral activity ...
Event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was used to explore how the human brain ...
International audienceBackgroundUnderstanding social interactions requires the ability to accurately...
Object grasping is fundamental to our interaction with the environment. To plan a grasp, the brain r...
During social interactions, how do we predict what other people are going to do next? One view is th...
Previous research has provided evidence for a neural system underlying the observation of another pe...
Consistent evidence suggests that the way we reach and grasp an object is modulated not only by obje...
<div><p>Understanding the intentions of others while watching their actions is a fundamental buildin...
Consistent evidence suggests that the way we reach and grasp an object is modulated not only by obje...
Previous behavioural and neuroimaging data on humans demonstrated that kinematics and the level of b...
Understanding the intentions of others while watching their actions is a fundamental building block ...
Understanding the intentions of others while watching their actions is a fundamental building block ...
Recent neuroimaging evidence in macaques has shown that the neural system underlying the observation...
Understanding the intentions of others while watching their actions is a fundamental building block ...
Previous neuroimaging research on healthy humans has provided evidence for a neural system underlyin...
We used fMRI to study the effect of hiding the target of a grasping action on the cerebral activity ...
Event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was used to explore how the human brain ...
International audienceBackgroundUnderstanding social interactions requires the ability to accurately...
Object grasping is fundamental to our interaction with the environment. To plan a grasp, the brain r...