The perception of tool–object pairs involves understanding their action-relationships (affordances). Here, we sought to evaluate how an observer visually encodes tool–object affordances. Eye-movements were recorded as right-handed participants freely viewed static, right-handed, egocentric tool–object images across three contexts: correct (e.g. hammer-nail), incorrect (e.g. hammer-paper), spatial/ambiguous (e.g. hammer-wood), and three grasp-types: no hand, functional grasp-posture (grasp hammer-handle), non-functional/manipulative grasp-posture (grasp hammer-head). There were three areas of interests (AOI): the object (nail), the operant tool-end (hammer-head), the graspable tool-end (hammer-handle). Participants passively evaluated whethe...
As we act on the world around us, our eyes seek out objects we plan to interact with. A growing body...
Brain areas involved in action representation (pre-motor cortex, posterior parietal cortex) are acti...
In the present study two separate stimulus\u2013response compatibility effects (functional affordanc...
Dataset for publication under reviewTools and objects are associated with numerous action possibilit...
Tools afford specialized actions that are tied closely to object identity. Although there is mountin...
A recent study showed that viewing manipulable objects such as images of tools induces the neural ac...
Studies on affordances typically focus on single objects. We investigated whether affordances are mo...
Studies on affordances typically focus on single objects. We investigated whether affordances are mo...
When we see a manipulable object (henceforth tool) or a hand performing a grasping movement, our bra...
Some objects in our environment are strongly tied to motor actions, a phenomenon called object affor...
Two experiments investigated (1) how activation of manual affordances is triggered by visual and lin...
When watching a child learning to use a spoon, a mother is immediately able to recognize the error w...
In this abstract we briefly introduce the analysis of simple rigid object affordance by experimental...
none6siPrior research has linked visual perception of tools with plausible motor strategies. Thus, o...
This study investigated whether in a stimulus-response compatibility (SRC) task affordance effects i...
As we act on the world around us, our eyes seek out objects we plan to interact with. A growing body...
Brain areas involved in action representation (pre-motor cortex, posterior parietal cortex) are acti...
In the present study two separate stimulus\u2013response compatibility effects (functional affordanc...
Dataset for publication under reviewTools and objects are associated with numerous action possibilit...
Tools afford specialized actions that are tied closely to object identity. Although there is mountin...
A recent study showed that viewing manipulable objects such as images of tools induces the neural ac...
Studies on affordances typically focus on single objects. We investigated whether affordances are mo...
Studies on affordances typically focus on single objects. We investigated whether affordances are mo...
When we see a manipulable object (henceforth tool) or a hand performing a grasping movement, our bra...
Some objects in our environment are strongly tied to motor actions, a phenomenon called object affor...
Two experiments investigated (1) how activation of manual affordances is triggered by visual and lin...
When watching a child learning to use a spoon, a mother is immediately able to recognize the error w...
In this abstract we briefly introduce the analysis of simple rigid object affordance by experimental...
none6siPrior research has linked visual perception of tools with plausible motor strategies. Thus, o...
This study investigated whether in a stimulus-response compatibility (SRC) task affordance effects i...
As we act on the world around us, our eyes seek out objects we plan to interact with. A growing body...
Brain areas involved in action representation (pre-motor cortex, posterior parietal cortex) are acti...
In the present study two separate stimulus\u2013response compatibility effects (functional affordanc...