Action understanding lies at the heart of social interaction. Prior research has often conceptualized this capacity in terms of a motoric matching of observed actions to an action in one’s motor repertoire, but has ignored the role of object information. In this manuscript, we set out an alternative conception of intention understanding, which places the role of objects as central to our observation and comprehension of the actions of others. We outline the current understanding of the interconnectedness of action and object knowledge, demonstrating how both rely heavily on the other. We then propose a novel framework, the affordance-matching hypothesis, which incorporates these findings into a simple model of action understanding, in which...
In their everyday life, humans interact with a multitude of objects. The ability to interact properl...
When we interact with the environment in our everyday life the relationship between what we see and ...
The mere observation of pictures or words referring to manipulable objects is sufficient to evoke th...
Intention understanding lies at the heart of social interaction. Prior research has often conceptual...
PubMed ID: 24860468 ESRC ES/J019178/1 One step ahead: prediction of other people’s behavior in healt...
An important question for the study of social interactions is how the motor actions of others are re...
An important question for the study of social interactions is how the motor actions of others are re...
Recent predictive processing models argue that action understanding is a predictive process, in whic...
Two experiments with a part generation task show that rated salience and production order of parts i...
Brain areas involved in action representation (pre-motor cortex, posterior parietal cortex) are acti...
The discovery of so-called ‘mirror neurons’ - found to respond both to own actions and the observati...
The discovery of so-called ‘mirror neurons’ - found to respond both to own actions and the observati...
Predictive processing accounts of social perception argue that action observation is a predictive pr...
Action is always situated, always tied to specific contexts, and this is the case with respect to bo...
The theory proposed by van Elk et al.[1] is compelling and I believe it will greatly contribute to t...
In their everyday life, humans interact with a multitude of objects. The ability to interact properl...
When we interact with the environment in our everyday life the relationship between what we see and ...
The mere observation of pictures or words referring to manipulable objects is sufficient to evoke th...
Intention understanding lies at the heart of social interaction. Prior research has often conceptual...
PubMed ID: 24860468 ESRC ES/J019178/1 One step ahead: prediction of other people’s behavior in healt...
An important question for the study of social interactions is how the motor actions of others are re...
An important question for the study of social interactions is how the motor actions of others are re...
Recent predictive processing models argue that action understanding is a predictive process, in whic...
Two experiments with a part generation task show that rated salience and production order of parts i...
Brain areas involved in action representation (pre-motor cortex, posterior parietal cortex) are acti...
The discovery of so-called ‘mirror neurons’ - found to respond both to own actions and the observati...
The discovery of so-called ‘mirror neurons’ - found to respond both to own actions and the observati...
Predictive processing accounts of social perception argue that action observation is a predictive pr...
Action is always situated, always tied to specific contexts, and this is the case with respect to bo...
The theory proposed by van Elk et al.[1] is compelling and I believe it will greatly contribute to t...
In their everyday life, humans interact with a multitude of objects. The ability to interact properl...
When we interact with the environment in our everyday life the relationship between what we see and ...
The mere observation of pictures or words referring to manipulable objects is sufficient to evoke th...