Consistent preferences for particular types of movement suggest criteria for movement selection. These can be important when, as is usually the case, infinitely many movements allow a task to be achieved. The experiments reported here were designed to identify the source of a strong preference observed in earlier object-manipulation studies. In those earlier studies, subjects usually grabbed objects to be moved from one location to another in a way that afforded a comfortable final posture rather than a comfortable initial posture (the end-state comfort effect). The comfortable final state usually allowed the forearm to be at or near the middle of its range of motion on the pronation-supination dimension. The hypothesis tested here was that...
When we see an object in the world, there may be a large number of different ways to interact with t...
There is ample evidence that people plan their movements to ensure comfortable final grasp postures ...
When moving, humans must overcome intrinsic (body centered) and extrinsic (target-related) redundanc...
Item does not contain fulltextMotor experts can accurately predict the future actions of others by o...
The choice to end comfortably often requires the adoption of uncomfortable beginning states, demonst...
Seegelke C, Hughes C, Schütz C, Schack T. Individual differences in motor planning during a multi-se...
Sharing a drink or passing a tool to another person is frequently done in our daily lives. However, ...
Movement Planning and the Role of End-State Comfort Nicole George, Paula M. van Wyk & Adriana M. D...
A goal of research on human perception and performance is to explore the relative importance of cons...
Item does not contain fulltextIn this paper, we review research that we and our colleagues have done...
2 The end-state comfort effect is the tendency to use an uncomfortable initial grasp posture for obj...
Item does not contain fulltextThe present experiment investigated the sensitivity for end-state comf...
The present experiment investigated the sensitivity for end-state comfort in a bimanual object manip...
Hughes C, Seegelke C, Schack T. The Influence of Initial and Final Precision on Motor Planning: Indi...
Seegelke C, Hughes C. The influence of action possibility and end-state comfort on motor imagery of ...
When we see an object in the world, there may be a large number of different ways to interact with t...
There is ample evidence that people plan their movements to ensure comfortable final grasp postures ...
When moving, humans must overcome intrinsic (body centered) and extrinsic (target-related) redundanc...
Item does not contain fulltextMotor experts can accurately predict the future actions of others by o...
The choice to end comfortably often requires the adoption of uncomfortable beginning states, demonst...
Seegelke C, Hughes C, Schütz C, Schack T. Individual differences in motor planning during a multi-se...
Sharing a drink or passing a tool to another person is frequently done in our daily lives. However, ...
Movement Planning and the Role of End-State Comfort Nicole George, Paula M. van Wyk & Adriana M. D...
A goal of research on human perception and performance is to explore the relative importance of cons...
Item does not contain fulltextIn this paper, we review research that we and our colleagues have done...
2 The end-state comfort effect is the tendency to use an uncomfortable initial grasp posture for obj...
Item does not contain fulltextThe present experiment investigated the sensitivity for end-state comf...
The present experiment investigated the sensitivity for end-state comfort in a bimanual object manip...
Hughes C, Seegelke C, Schack T. The Influence of Initial and Final Precision on Motor Planning: Indi...
Seegelke C, Hughes C. The influence of action possibility and end-state comfort on motor imagery of ...
When we see an object in the world, there may be a large number of different ways to interact with t...
There is ample evidence that people plan their movements to ensure comfortable final grasp postures ...
When moving, humans must overcome intrinsic (body centered) and extrinsic (target-related) redundanc...