AbstractSimple geometric shapes moving in a self-propelled manner, and violating Newtonian laws of motion by acting against gravitational forces tend to induce a judgement that an object is animate. Objects that change their motion only due to external causes are more likely judged as inanimate. How the developing brain is employed in the perception of animacy in early ontogeny is currently unknown. The aim of this study was to use ERP techniques to determine if the negative central component (Nc), a waveform related to attention allocation, was differentially affected when an infant observed animate or inanimate motion. Short animated movies comprising a marble moving along a marble run either in an animate or an inanimate manner were pres...
Among a variety of entities in their environment, what do humans consider alive or animate and how d...
The origin in infancy of the distinction between animate beings (animals and humans), and inanimate ...
Since the seminal work of Fritz Heider and Marienne Simmel (1944) the study of animacy perception, o...
AbstractSimple geometric shapes moving in a self-propelled manner, and violating Newtonian laws of m...
Simple geometric shapes moving in a self-propelled manner, and violating Newtonian laws of motion by...
Given that biological motion is both detected and preferred early in life, we tested the hypothesis ...
The human visual system can discriminate between animate beings vs. inanimate objects on the basis o...
Given that biological motion is both detected and preferred early in life, we tested the hypothesis ...
The authors examine recent theoretical perspectives of the development of the animate-inanimate dist...
<p>Motion cues such as agency and self-propulsion are considered central to infants’ developing abil...
AbstractWe investigated the neural correlates of chasing perception in infancy to determine whether ...
A consistent pattern of results indicates that from an early age humans are competent to represent o...
Researchers have postulated word-learning biases to explain infants' effortless acquisition of objec...
Martin E. P. Seligman, professor of psychology at the University of Pennsylvania, is one of the worl...
It has recently been proposed that infants have formed conceptual categories, such as animate and in...
Among a variety of entities in their environment, what do humans consider alive or animate and how d...
The origin in infancy of the distinction between animate beings (animals and humans), and inanimate ...
Since the seminal work of Fritz Heider and Marienne Simmel (1944) the study of animacy perception, o...
AbstractSimple geometric shapes moving in a self-propelled manner, and violating Newtonian laws of m...
Simple geometric shapes moving in a self-propelled manner, and violating Newtonian laws of motion by...
Given that biological motion is both detected and preferred early in life, we tested the hypothesis ...
The human visual system can discriminate between animate beings vs. inanimate objects on the basis o...
Given that biological motion is both detected and preferred early in life, we tested the hypothesis ...
The authors examine recent theoretical perspectives of the development of the animate-inanimate dist...
<p>Motion cues such as agency and self-propulsion are considered central to infants’ developing abil...
AbstractWe investigated the neural correlates of chasing perception in infancy to determine whether ...
A consistent pattern of results indicates that from an early age humans are competent to represent o...
Researchers have postulated word-learning biases to explain infants' effortless acquisition of objec...
Martin E. P. Seligman, professor of psychology at the University of Pennsylvania, is one of the worl...
It has recently been proposed that infants have formed conceptual categories, such as animate and in...
Among a variety of entities in their environment, what do humans consider alive or animate and how d...
The origin in infancy of the distinction between animate beings (animals and humans), and inanimate ...
Since the seminal work of Fritz Heider and Marienne Simmel (1944) the study of animacy perception, o...