BACKGROUND: When we reach out to pick up an object, not only do we direct our moving limb towards the location of the object, but the opening between our fingers and thumb is scaled in flight to the object's size. Evidence obtained from patients with neurological disorders has shown that the visual processing underlying the calibration of grip aperture and other movement parameters during grasping is mediated by visual mechanisms located in the cerebral cortex that are quite distinct from those underlying the experiential perception of object size and other object features. Under appropriate conditions, such dissociations can also be observed in individuals with normal vision. Here we present evidence that the calibration of grasp is quite ...
It is an open question whether visual illusions affect motor responses to the same extent as percept...
It is an open question whether the Ebbinghaus (or Titchener) illusion affects perception more than g...
AbstractAccording to a recently proposed distinction [1] between vision for perception and vision fo...
AbstractBackground: When we reach out to pick up an object, not only do we direct our moving limb to...
Size contrast illusions are assumed to exert a smaller effect on human motor behavior than on percep...
How does the eye guide the hand in an ever-changing world? The perception-action model posits that v...
How does the eye guide the hand in an ever-changing world? The two visual system model proposes that...
INTRODUCTION. How does the eye guide the hand in an ever-changing world? Actions such as grasping im...
Neuropsychological studies prompted the theory that the primate visual system might be organized int...
Manual size estimation (participants indicate the size of an object with index finger and thumb) is ...
AbstractAlthough pictorial illusions have been used to study perception for a long time, the effects...
The theory of two visual systems assumes that visual perception relies on a ventral pathway extendin...
<div><h3>Background</h3><p>Human resolution for object size is typically determined by psychophysica...
In previous studies, we found effects of the Ebbinghaus (or Titchener) illusion on grasping. This co...
Manual size estimation (participants indicate the size of an object with index finger and thumb) is ...
It is an open question whether visual illusions affect motor responses to the same extent as percept...
It is an open question whether the Ebbinghaus (or Titchener) illusion affects perception more than g...
AbstractAccording to a recently proposed distinction [1] between vision for perception and vision fo...
AbstractBackground: When we reach out to pick up an object, not only do we direct our moving limb to...
Size contrast illusions are assumed to exert a smaller effect on human motor behavior than on percep...
How does the eye guide the hand in an ever-changing world? The perception-action model posits that v...
How does the eye guide the hand in an ever-changing world? The two visual system model proposes that...
INTRODUCTION. How does the eye guide the hand in an ever-changing world? Actions such as grasping im...
Neuropsychological studies prompted the theory that the primate visual system might be organized int...
Manual size estimation (participants indicate the size of an object with index finger and thumb) is ...
AbstractAlthough pictorial illusions have been used to study perception for a long time, the effects...
The theory of two visual systems assumes that visual perception relies on a ventral pathway extendin...
<div><h3>Background</h3><p>Human resolution for object size is typically determined by psychophysica...
In previous studies, we found effects of the Ebbinghaus (or Titchener) illusion on grasping. This co...
Manual size estimation (participants indicate the size of an object with index finger and thumb) is ...
It is an open question whether visual illusions affect motor responses to the same extent as percept...
It is an open question whether the Ebbinghaus (or Titchener) illusion affects perception more than g...
AbstractAccording to a recently proposed distinction [1] between vision for perception and vision fo...