Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 118
pro vyhledávání: '"Richard M Wilkie"'
Autor:
William E A Sheppard, Polly Dickerson, Rigmor C Baraas, Mark Mon-Williams, Brendan T Barrett, Richard M Wilkie, Rachel O Coats
Publikováno v:
PLoS ONE, Vol 16, Iss 11, p e0258678 (2021)
PurposeMany people experience unilateral degraded vision, usually owing to a developmental or age-related disorder. There are unresolved questions regarding the extent to which such unilateral visual deficits impact on sensorimotor performance; an im
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/a9e1b8ae23964413800e4a9dafdbd540
Autor:
Jack Brookes, Faisal Mushtaq, Earle Jamieson, Aaron J Fath, Geoffrey Bingham, Peter Culmer, Richard M Wilkie, Mark Mon-Williams
Publikováno v:
PLoS ONE, Vol 15, Iss 5, p e0224055 (2020)
Disturbance forces facilitate motor learning, but theoretical explanations for this counterintuitive phenomenon are lacking. Smooth arm movements require predictions (inference) about the force-field associated with a workspace. The Free Energy Princ
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/1d7888c7887245488de89b409125f9b6
Autor:
Rachael K Raw, Richard M Wilkie, Richard J Allen, Matthew Warburton, Matteo Leonetti, Justin H G Williams, Mark Mon-Williams
Publikováno v:
PLoS ONE, Vol 14, Iss 2, p e0211706 (2019)
Some activities can be meaningfully dichotomised as 'cognitive' or 'sensorimotor' in nature-but many cannot. This has radical implications for understanding activity limitation in disability. For example, older adults take longer to learn the serial
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/369cbf1801fd44a2ae1f28ac0efc479c
Publikováno v:
PLoS ONE, Vol 10, Iss 5, p e0128322 (2015)
Some studies have shown that manual asymmetries decrease in older age. These results have often been explained with reference to models of reduced hemispheric specialisation. An alternative explanation, however, is that hand differences are subtle, a
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/2e7e88e0863c42e996525fa6572506e6
Autor:
Raymond J Holt, Alexis S Lefevre, Ian J Flatters, Pete Culmer, Richard M Wilkie, Brian W Henson, Geoff P Bingham, Mark Mon-Williams
Publikováno v:
PLoS ONE, Vol 8, Iss 7, p e69040 (2013)
Old age is associated with reduced mobility of the hand. To investigate age related decline when reaching-to-lift an object we used sophisticated kinematic apparatus to record reaches carried out by healthy older and younger participants. Three objec
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/49930664c9684b0d8dfbec40dd752f2c
Publikováno v:
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance. 48:64-76
Vehicle control by humans is possible because the central nervous system is capable of using visual information to produce complex sensorimotor actions. Drivers must monitor errors and initiate steering corrections of appropriate magnitude and timing
Cataract removal surgery is one of the most commonly performed surgical procedure in developed countries. The financial and staff resource cost that first-eye cataract surgery incurs, leads to restricted access to second-eye cataract surgery (SES) in
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::4d33229c33c983a813d66311351f8fb3
https://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/188382/1/2022_Sheppard_sysreview.pdf
https://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/188382/1/2022_Sheppard_sysreview.pdf
Autor:
John P. Pickavance, Oscar T. Giles, J. Ryan Morehead, Faisal Mushtaq, Richard M. Wilkie, Mark Mon-Williams
Publikováno v:
Journal of neurophysiology. 127(4)
We previously linked interceptive timing performance to mathematics attainment in 5-11-year-old children, which we attributed to the neural overlap between spatiotemporal and numerical operations. This explanation implies the relationship should pers
Publikováno v:
Journal of Vision
Skillful behavior requires the anticipation of future action requirements. This is particularly true during high-speed locomotor steering where solely detecting and correcting current error is insufficient to produce smooth and accurate trajectories.
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::261796b50b504dcb9778c2725819e874
http://hdl.handle.net/10138/334828
http://hdl.handle.net/10138/334828
Publikováno v:
PLoS Computational Biology, Vol 17, Iss 7, p e1009096 (2021)
PLoS Computational Biology
PLoS Computational Biology
Evidence accumulation models provide a dominant account of human decision-making, and have been particularly successful at explaining behavioral and neural data in laboratory paradigms using abstract, stationary stimuli. It has been proposed, but wit