While interacting with objects during every-day activities, e.g. when sliding a glass on a counter top, people obtain constant feedback whether they are acting in accordance with physical laws. However, classical research on intuitive physics has revealed that people's judgements systematically deviate from predictions of Newtonian physics. Recent research has explained at least some of these deviations not as consequence of misconceptions about physics but instead as the consequence of the probabilistic interaction between inevitable perceptual uncertainties and prior beliefs. How intuitive physical reasoning relates to visuomotor actions is much less known. Here, we present an experiment in which participants had to slide pucks under the ...
Our ability to make reliable physical predictions even in novel settings is a hallmark of human inte...
Abstract Does human behavior exploit deep and accurate knowledge about how the world ...
In Michotte's launching displays, while the launcher (object A) seems to move autonomously, the targ...
While interacting with objects during every-day activities, e.g. when sliding a glass on a counter t...
The field of intuitive physics has been reinvigorated in recent years, providing converging computat...
People have strong intuitions about the influence objects exert upon one another when they collide. ...
Humans interact with their environment and its physical laws with ease and thereby demonstrate the a...
Mental simulation is a powerful cognitive capacity that underlies people's ability to draw inference...
<p>Many human activities require precise judgments about the physical properties and dynamics of mul...
Recent work suggests that people predict how objects interact in a manner consistent with Newtonian ...
Research into human models of intuitive physics typically falls into one of two camps, either claimi...
Most behavioral tasks have time constraints for successful completion, such as catching a ball in fl...
How do people reason intuitively about everyday physical events? Two broad camps provide very differ...
Navigating the physical world hinges on our intuitive understanding of object behaviors and our rema...
Supported by Leverhulme Trust Grant RPG-2017-232 awarded to CH and JH. The data are available online...
Our ability to make reliable physical predictions even in novel settings is a hallmark of human inte...
Abstract Does human behavior exploit deep and accurate knowledge about how the world ...
In Michotte's launching displays, while the launcher (object A) seems to move autonomously, the targ...
While interacting with objects during every-day activities, e.g. when sliding a glass on a counter t...
The field of intuitive physics has been reinvigorated in recent years, providing converging computat...
People have strong intuitions about the influence objects exert upon one another when they collide. ...
Humans interact with their environment and its physical laws with ease and thereby demonstrate the a...
Mental simulation is a powerful cognitive capacity that underlies people's ability to draw inference...
<p>Many human activities require precise judgments about the physical properties and dynamics of mul...
Recent work suggests that people predict how objects interact in a manner consistent with Newtonian ...
Research into human models of intuitive physics typically falls into one of two camps, either claimi...
Most behavioral tasks have time constraints for successful completion, such as catching a ball in fl...
How do people reason intuitively about everyday physical events? Two broad camps provide very differ...
Navigating the physical world hinges on our intuitive understanding of object behaviors and our rema...
Supported by Leverhulme Trust Grant RPG-2017-232 awarded to CH and JH. The data are available online...
Our ability to make reliable physical predictions even in novel settings is a hallmark of human inte...
Abstract Does human behavior exploit deep and accurate knowledge about how the world ...
In Michotte's launching displays, while the launcher (object A) seems to move autonomously, the targ...