SummaryIt has been proposed that the mental representation of a graspable object involves not only a description of its visual properties but also encodings of the motor programs to act upon it [1]. Thus, observing a handle automatically primes the motor programs responsible for reaching and grasping it. Here, we provide neurological evidence that such action-related object features can bias visual selection. Two patients with visual extinction after right-parietal injury detected cups with left- or right-oriented handles, briefly displayed in either or both visual fields. People with this disorder have deficient awareness for stimuli toward the contralesional, left side of space, especially when competing stimuli appear further to the righ...
This thesis examines the relation between visual objects and the actions they afford. It is propose...
Extinction is an example of how stimulus selection may be affected by an imbalance in competition fo...
What are the relations between perceptual selection (e.g., for object identification) and action sel...
SummaryIt has been proposed that the mental representation of a graspable object involves not only a...
It has been proposed that the mental representation of a graspable object involves not only a descri...
Affordances represent features of an object that trigger specific actions. Here we tested whether th...
Prior work shows that the possibility of action to an object (visual affordance) facilitates attenti...
AbstractBrain areas exist that appear to be specialized for the coding of visual space surrounding t...
A wealth of behavioral data has shown that the visual properties of objects automatically potentiate...
AbstractPatients with damage to primary visual cortex can sometimes direct actions towards ‘unseen’ ...
Following lesions to (usually) the right parietal lobe, patients may fail to report stimuli on their...
Visual extinction, associated with unilateral parietal damage, occurs when a patient can report a si...
Several recent studies have reported that left visual inattention following right-hemisphere damage ...
We assessed the factors which affect the selection of objects for action, focusing on the role of ac...
This study investigated whether in a stimulus\u2013response compatibility (SRC) task a\ufb00ordance ...
This thesis examines the relation between visual objects and the actions they afford. It is propose...
Extinction is an example of how stimulus selection may be affected by an imbalance in competition fo...
What are the relations between perceptual selection (e.g., for object identification) and action sel...
SummaryIt has been proposed that the mental representation of a graspable object involves not only a...
It has been proposed that the mental representation of a graspable object involves not only a descri...
Affordances represent features of an object that trigger specific actions. Here we tested whether th...
Prior work shows that the possibility of action to an object (visual affordance) facilitates attenti...
AbstractBrain areas exist that appear to be specialized for the coding of visual space surrounding t...
A wealth of behavioral data has shown that the visual properties of objects automatically potentiate...
AbstractPatients with damage to primary visual cortex can sometimes direct actions towards ‘unseen’ ...
Following lesions to (usually) the right parietal lobe, patients may fail to report stimuli on their...
Visual extinction, associated with unilateral parietal damage, occurs when a patient can report a si...
Several recent studies have reported that left visual inattention following right-hemisphere damage ...
We assessed the factors which affect the selection of objects for action, focusing on the role of ac...
This study investigated whether in a stimulus\u2013response compatibility (SRC) task a\ufb00ordance ...
This thesis examines the relation between visual objects and the actions they afford. It is propose...
Extinction is an example of how stimulus selection may be affected by an imbalance in competition fo...
What are the relations between perceptual selection (e.g., for object identification) and action sel...