Motor priming refers to the direct matching of an observed action onto the observer's motor repertoire (lacoboni et al., 1999) leading to a tendency to automatically reproduce the action. Recent research has shown diminished automatic imitation when observing nonbiological agents, biomechanically impossible actions, and non-intentionally produced actions. However, the question of whether automatic imitation also occurs for physically impossible actions remains open We found motor priming effects of the same size for both physically possible and impossible movements in a choice-reaction task paradigm (Experiment 1). Both physically possible and impossible movements also elicited identical motor priming effects when attention was drawn to the...
We demonstrate that observation of everyday rhythmical actions biases subsequent motor execution of ...
Automatic imitation is the finding that movement execution is facilitated by compatible and impeded ...
Research has shown that the observation of another’s movement activates the corresponding motor repr...
Motor priming refers to the direct matching of an observed action onto the observer's motor repertoi...
Item does not contain fulltextMotor priming refers to the direct matching of an observed action onto...
Recent behavioral, neuroimaging, and neurophysiological research suggests a common representational ...
"Automatic imitation" is a type of stimulus-response compatibility effect in which the topographical...
Recent behavioural and neuroimaging studies have found that observation of human movement, but not o...
Recent behavioural and neuroimaging studies have found that observation of human movement, but not o...
We demonstrate that observation of everyday rhythmical actions biases subsequent motor execution of ...
Automatic imitation is the tendency to reproduce observed actions involutarily. Though this topic ha...
Two important dimensions of action are the movement and the body part with which the movement is eff...
Imitation involves matching the visual representation of another’s action onto the observer’s own mo...
Automatic imitation is the finding that movement execution is facilitated by compatible and impeded ...
There is recent evidence that we directly map observed actions of other agents onto our own motor re...
We demonstrate that observation of everyday rhythmical actions biases subsequent motor execution of ...
Automatic imitation is the finding that movement execution is facilitated by compatible and impeded ...
Research has shown that the observation of another’s movement activates the corresponding motor repr...
Motor priming refers to the direct matching of an observed action onto the observer's motor repertoi...
Item does not contain fulltextMotor priming refers to the direct matching of an observed action onto...
Recent behavioral, neuroimaging, and neurophysiological research suggests a common representational ...
"Automatic imitation" is a type of stimulus-response compatibility effect in which the topographical...
Recent behavioural and neuroimaging studies have found that observation of human movement, but not o...
Recent behavioural and neuroimaging studies have found that observation of human movement, but not o...
We demonstrate that observation of everyday rhythmical actions biases subsequent motor execution of ...
Automatic imitation is the tendency to reproduce observed actions involutarily. Though this topic ha...
Two important dimensions of action are the movement and the body part with which the movement is eff...
Imitation involves matching the visual representation of another’s action onto the observer’s own mo...
Automatic imitation is the finding that movement execution is facilitated by compatible and impeded ...
There is recent evidence that we directly map observed actions of other agents onto our own motor re...
We demonstrate that observation of everyday rhythmical actions biases subsequent motor execution of ...
Automatic imitation is the finding that movement execution is facilitated by compatible and impeded ...
Research has shown that the observation of another’s movement activates the corresponding motor repr...