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pro vyhledávání: '"John Randall Flanagan"'
Autor:
Daniel J. Gale, Jason P. Gallivan, John Randall Flanagan, Corson N. Areshenkoff, Dominic Standage, Joe Y Nashed
Humans vary greatly in their motor learning abilities, yet little is known about the neural mechanisms that underlie this variability. Recent neuroimaging and electrophysiological studies demonstrate that large-scale neural dynamics inhabit a low-dim
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_________::0b9c20cd274c3862fec731cc4490eba1
https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.09.01.458601
https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.09.01.458601
Publikováno v:
Experimental Brain Research. 195:273-283
Most object manipulation tasks involve a series of actions demarcated by mechanical contact events, and gaze is typically directed to the locations of these events as the task unfolds. Here, we examined the timing of gaze shifts relative to hand move
Autor:
Toshinori Yoshioka, John Randall Flanagan, Mitsuo Kawato, Rieko Osu, Hiroshi Imamizu, Eri Nakano
Publikováno v:
Systems and Computers in Japan. 33:80-94
We have studied the learning processes of reaching movements under novel environments whose kinematic and dynamic properties are altered. In the experiments, we have used, as the kinematic transformation, a rotational transformation which is displaye
Publikováno v:
Experimental Brain Research. 125:109-114
Visual size illusions have been shown to affect perceived object size but not the aperture of the hand when reaching to those same objects. Thus, vision for perception is said to be dissociated from vision for action. The present study examines the e
Publikováno v:
Experimental brain research. 128(1-2)
We examined grip force adjustments during movements of a hand-held object in a young man (BF) with Tourette’s syndrome. We directly compared BF’s voluntary up and down movements with tics in the same directions. Movement tics were elicited by cue
Publikováno v:
Experimental brain research. 116(1)
The reactive forces and torques associated with moving a hand-held object between two points are potentially destabilising, both for the object's position in the hand and for body posture. Previous work has demonstrated that there are increases in gr
Publikováno v:
Experimental Brain Research. 208:309-309
Most object manipulation tasks involve a series of actions demarcated by mechanical contact events, and gaze is typically directed to the locations of these events as the task unfolds. Here, we examined the timing of gaze shifts relative to hand move