Action categories and the perception of biological motion.
about
Action and emotion recognition from point light displays: an investigation of gender differencesSignature movements lead to efficient search for threatening actionsAction Recognition and Movement Direction Discrimination Tasks Are Associated with Different Adaptation Patterns.Recruitment of both the mirror and the mentalizing networks when observing social interactions depicted by point-lights: a neuroimaging studyCommunicative interactions improve visual detection of biological motionVisual control of an action discrimination in pigeonsWhen emulation becomes reciprocity.Deriving motor primitives through action segmentation.Abstracting Dance: Detaching Ourselves from the Habitual Perception of the Moving BodyBiological motion stimuli are attractive to medaka fish.Electrophysiology and brain imaging of biological motionCommunicative interactions in point-light displays: Choosing among multiple response alternatives.A dyadic stimulus set of audiovisual affective displays for the study of multisensory, emotional, social interactions.Action observation: the less-explored part of higher-order vision.Perception of biological motion: a stimulus set of human point-light actions.Self recognition versus recognition of others by biological motion: viewpoint-dependent effects.Differential orientation effect in the neural response to interacting biological motion of two agents.Unaffected perceptual thresholds for biological and non-biological form-from-motion perception in autism spectrum conditions.Perception of Communicative and Non-communicative Motion-Defined Gestures in Parkinson's Disease.Inversion Reveals Perceptual Asymmetries in the Configural Processing of Human Body.Perception of biological motion in schizophrenia and healthy individuals: a behavioral and FMRI study.Neural correlates of apparent motion perception of impoverished facial stimuli: a comparison of ERP and ERSP activity.Comparing biological motion perception in two distinct human societies.Biological motion cues trigger reflexive attentional orienting.Responses of Anterior Superior Temporal Polysensory (STPa) Neurons to "Biological Motion" Stimuli.Absent activation in medial prefrontal cortex and temporoparietal junction but not superior temporal sulcus during the perception of biological motion in schizophrenia: a functional MRI study.Seeing the world topsy-turvy: The primary role of kinematics in biological motion inversion effects.Perceiving the direction of articulatory motion in point-light actionsAnalysing expertise through data mining: an example based on treading water.The effect of social context on the use of visual informationDirection of Biological Motion Affects Early Brain Activation: A Link with Social Cognition.The signer and the sign: cortical correlates of person identity and language processing from point-light displays.Social Interactions Receive Priority to Conscious Perception.Do People "Pop Out"?Emotion recognition through static faces and moving bodies: a comparison between typically developed adults and individuals with high level of autistic traits.Healthy older observers cannot use biological-motion point-light information efficiently within 4 m of themselves.Deficits in implicit attention to social signals in schizophrenia and high risk groups: behavioural evidence from a new illusionExpertise and attunement to kinematic constraints.The application of biological motion research: biometrics, sport, and the military.Recognition of biological motion in children with autistic spectrum disorders.
P2860
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P2860
Action categories and the perception of biological motion.
description
1993 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
1993年の論文
@ja
1993年論文
@yue
1993年論文
@zh-hant
1993年論文
@zh-hk
1993年論文
@zh-mo
1993年論文
@zh-tw
1993年论文
@wuu
1993年论文
@zh
1993年论文
@zh-cn
name
Action categories and the perception of biological motion.
@en
type
label
Action categories and the perception of biological motion.
@en
prefLabel
Action categories and the perception of biological motion.
@en
P2860
P356
P1433
P1476
Action categories and the perception of biological motion.
@en
P2093
W H Dittrich
P2860
P356
10.1068/P220015
P577
1993-01-01T00:00:00Z