We investigated whether people take into account an interaction partner's attentional focus and whether they represent in advance their partner's part of the task when planning to engage in a synchronous joint action. The experiment involved two participants planning and performing joint actions (i.e., synchronously lifting and clinking glasses), unimanual individual actions (i.e., lifting and moving a glass as if clinking with another person), and bimanual individual actions. EEG was recorded from one of the participants. We employed a choice reaction paradigm where a visual cue indicated the type of action to be planned, followed 1.5 sec later by a visual go stimulus, prompting the participants to act. We studied attention allocation proc...
In line with the Theory of Event Coding (Hommel et al., 2001), action planning has been shown to aff...
When two individuals alternate reaching responses to targets located in a visual display, reaction t...
Humans are experts in cooperating with each other when trying to accomplish tasks they cannot achiev...
We investigated whether people take into account an interaction partner's attentional focus and whet...
Many of the actions that humans perform everyday are completed with co-actors. Cognitive theories o...
Do people engaged in joint action form action plans that specify joint outcomes at the group level? ...
It has been postulated that when people engage in joint actions they form internal representations n...
It has been postulated that when people engage in joint actions they form internal representations n...
The most common explanation for joint-action effects has been the action co-representation account i...
Previous studies have shown that perceiving another's actions activates corresponding representation...
AbstractPrevious research has identified a number of coordination processes that enable people to pe...
In joint action, multiple people coordinate their actions to perform a task together. This often req...
Typically, when two individuals perform a task together, each partner monitors the other partners' r...
Typically, when two individuals perform a task together, each partner monitors the other partners' r...
Joint actions often require agents to track others’ actions while planning and executing physically ...
In line with the Theory of Event Coding (Hommel et al., 2001), action planning has been shown to aff...
When two individuals alternate reaching responses to targets located in a visual display, reaction t...
Humans are experts in cooperating with each other when trying to accomplish tasks they cannot achiev...
We investigated whether people take into account an interaction partner's attentional focus and whet...
Many of the actions that humans perform everyday are completed with co-actors. Cognitive theories o...
Do people engaged in joint action form action plans that specify joint outcomes at the group level? ...
It has been postulated that when people engage in joint actions they form internal representations n...
It has been postulated that when people engage in joint actions they form internal representations n...
The most common explanation for joint-action effects has been the action co-representation account i...
Previous studies have shown that perceiving another's actions activates corresponding representation...
AbstractPrevious research has identified a number of coordination processes that enable people to pe...
In joint action, multiple people coordinate their actions to perform a task together. This often req...
Typically, when two individuals perform a task together, each partner monitors the other partners' r...
Typically, when two individuals perform a task together, each partner monitors the other partners' r...
Joint actions often require agents to track others’ actions while planning and executing physically ...
In line with the Theory of Event Coding (Hommel et al., 2001), action planning has been shown to aff...
When two individuals alternate reaching responses to targets located in a visual display, reaction t...
Humans are experts in cooperating with each other when trying to accomplish tasks they cannot achiev...