The reach-to-touch paradigm has become an increasingly popular tool in the study of human cognition. It is widely held that reaching responses are able to reveal the moment-by-moment unfolding of decision processes by virtue of an assumed continuity between reaching trajectories and the underlying "cognitive trajectory." Yet the standard analysis of reaching trajectories aggregates the trajectories across stimulus viewing times, which yields ambiguous results. Here we introduce a new version of the reach-to-touch paradigm that incorporates the response-signal procedure to elicit reaching movements across a wide range of stimulus viewing times. We then analyze the direction of the initial movement by stimulus viewing time, which produces a s...
The study of motor planning and learning in humans has undergone a dramatic transformation in the 20...
Consistent with action-based theories of attention, the presence of a nontarget stimulus in the envi...
A recent study by van Ede et al. (2012) shows that the accuracy and reaction time in humans of tacti...
Theories of decision-making have traditionally been constrained by reaction time data. A limitation ...
Though several features of cognitive processing can be inferred from the discrete measurement (e.g.,...
Spivey, Grosjean, and Knoblich (2005) reported smoothly curved reaching movements, via computer-mous...
By using both experimental and computational modelling approaches, this thesis presents evidence for...
Gaze, pointing, and reaching movements are thought to provide a window to internal cognitive states....
For selecting an action, traditional theories suggest a cognitive architecture made of serial proces...
AbstractIt is known that looming motion can capture attention regardless of an observer’s intentions...
Abstract — We present a neuro-dynamic model of looking, reaching, and grasping movements in infants ...
Cognitive and neuroscientific evidence has challenged the widespread view that perception, cognition...
In categorisation tasks, such as lexical decision, the standard dependent measure in cognitive psych...
In an interactive environment, we use a multitude of eye and hand movements to gather information ab...
Eye movement research is a highly active and productive research field. Here we focus on how the emb...
The study of motor planning and learning in humans has undergone a dramatic transformation in the 20...
Consistent with action-based theories of attention, the presence of a nontarget stimulus in the envi...
A recent study by van Ede et al. (2012) shows that the accuracy and reaction time in humans of tacti...
Theories of decision-making have traditionally been constrained by reaction time data. A limitation ...
Though several features of cognitive processing can be inferred from the discrete measurement (e.g.,...
Spivey, Grosjean, and Knoblich (2005) reported smoothly curved reaching movements, via computer-mous...
By using both experimental and computational modelling approaches, this thesis presents evidence for...
Gaze, pointing, and reaching movements are thought to provide a window to internal cognitive states....
For selecting an action, traditional theories suggest a cognitive architecture made of serial proces...
AbstractIt is known that looming motion can capture attention regardless of an observer’s intentions...
Abstract — We present a neuro-dynamic model of looking, reaching, and grasping movements in infants ...
Cognitive and neuroscientific evidence has challenged the widespread view that perception, cognition...
In categorisation tasks, such as lexical decision, the standard dependent measure in cognitive psych...
In an interactive environment, we use a multitude of eye and hand movements to gather information ab...
Eye movement research is a highly active and productive research field. Here we focus on how the emb...
The study of motor planning and learning in humans has undergone a dramatic transformation in the 20...
Consistent with action-based theories of attention, the presence of a nontarget stimulus in the envi...
A recent study by van Ede et al. (2012) shows that the accuracy and reaction time in humans of tacti...