Pages that link to "Q48243840"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
The following pages link to Force requirements of observed object lifting are encoded by the observer's motor system: a TMS study (Q48243840):
Displaying 43 items.
- Observing a movement correction during walking affects evoked responses but not unperturbed walking (Q27314949) (← links)
- The effect of action experience on sensorimotor EEG rhythms during action observation (Q33563533) (← links)
- Timecourse of mirror and counter-mirror effects measured with transcranial magnetic stimulation (Q34021471) (← links)
- Attentional demands of movement observation as tested by a dual task approach (Q34071902) (← links)
- Balancing the excitability of M1 circuitry during movement observation without overt replication (Q34198534) (← links)
- Observing Grasping Actions Directed to Emotion-Laden Objects: Effects upon Corticospinal Excitability (Q34678767) (← links)
- Modulation of inhibitory corticospinal circuits induced by a nocebo procedure in motor performance (Q35553575) (← links)
- The Fox and the Grapes-How Physical Constraints Affect Value Based Decision Making (Q35659569) (← links)
- Direct mapping rather than motor prediction subserves modulation of corticospinal excitability during observation of actions in real time (Q35746873) (← links)
- The Relative Influence of Goal and Kinematics on Corticospinal Excitability Depends on the Information Provided to the Observer (Q35826116) (← links)
- Mapping Muscles Activation to Force Perception during Unloading (Q35975612) (← links)
- Motor-Evoked Potentials in the Lower Back Are Modulated by Visual Perception of Lifted Weight (Q36060081) (← links)
- Observational Learning: Tell Beginners What They Are about to Watch and They Will Learn Better (Q36517715) (← links)
- Mirror training to augment cross-education during resistance training: a hypothesis (Q37040861) (← links)
- The role of observers' gaze behaviour when watching object manipulation tasks: predicting and evaluating the consequences of action (Q37134700) (← links)
- Weight dependent modulation of motor resonance induced by weight estimation during observation of partially occluded lifting actions (Q37138497) (← links)
- Are We Real When We Fake? Attunement to Object Weight in Natural and Pantomimed Grasping Movements (Q37273300) (← links)
- A Causal Role for Primary Motor Cortex in Perception of Observed Actions. (Q37696688) (← links)
- Vicarious motor activation during action perception: beyond correlational evidence. (Q38106975) (← links)
- Grasp-specific motor resonance is influenced by the visibility of the observed actor (Q41606955) (← links)
- The right temporoparietal junction encodes efforts of others during action observation (Q42404818) (← links)
- Infant Brain Responses to Object Weight: Exploring Goal-Directed Actions and Self-Experience (Q42725665) (← links)
- The heaviness of invisible objects: Predictive weight judgments from observed real and pantomimed grasps (Q42762379) (← links)
- Adaptation of lift forces in object manipulation through action observation (Q44100889) (← links)
- The relative influences of movement kinematics and extrinsic object characteristics on the perception of lifted weight. (Q47211435) (← links)
- Analysis of mirror neuron system activation during action observation alone and action observation with motor imagery tasks. (Q47259437) (← links)
- Effect of weight-related labels on corticospinal excitability during observation of grasping: a TMS study (Q47378563) (← links)
- The motor system resonates to the distal goal of observed actions: testing the inverse pliers paradigm in an ecological setting (Q47859800) (← links)
- Directing visual attention during action observation modulates corticospinal excitability (Q47881975) (← links)
- Action simulation plays a critical role in deceptive action recognition. (Q47925893) (← links)
- Infants' grip strength predicts mu rhythm attenuation during observation of lifting actions with weighted blocks (Q48194336) (← links)
- Increases of corticospinal excitability in self-related processing (Q48474823) (← links)
- Observing how others lift light or heavy objects: time-dependent encoding of grip force in the primary motor cortex (Q48889036) (← links)
- Dissociated Representations of Deceptive Intentions and Kinematic Adaptations in the Observer's Motor System. (Q49666862) (← links)
- Movement observation affects sensorimotor memory when lifting a familiar object (Q50991395) (← links)
- Grasping with tools: corticospinal excitability reflects observed hand movements. (Q53085644) (← links)
- Sensory effects of action observation: evidence for perceptual enhancement driven by sensory rather than motor simulation. (Q53118582) (← links)
- Patients with complex regional pain syndrome overestimate applied force in observed hand actions. (Q53301728) (← links)
- Placebo-Induced Changes in Excitatory and Inhibitory Corticospinal Circuits during Motor Performance (Q60730367) (← links)
- Implicit preference towards slim bodies and weight-stigma modulate the understanding of observed familiar actions (Q89283745) (← links)
- Editorial: How Do Motivational States Influence Motor Resonance? (Q89963908) (← links)
- Changes in corticospinal excitability associated with motor learning by observing (Q90387854) (← links)
- Anticipatory effect of execution on observation: an approach using ExoPinch finger robot (Q91779457) (← links)