Pages that link to "Q64131826"
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The following pages link to Movement observation affects movement execution in a simple response task (Q64131826):
Displaying 50 items.
- Emulation and mimicry for social interaction: A theoretical approach to imitation in autism (Q22242966) (← links)
- Where does your own action influence your perception of another person's action in the brain? (Q25975521) (← links)
- Factors affecting athletes' motor behavior after the observation of scenes of cooperation and competition in competitive sport: the effect of sport attitude. (Q27306271) (← links)
- Behavioral and TMS Markers of Action Observation Might Reflect Distinct Neuronal Processes. (Q27314523) (← links)
- Changing motor perception by sensorimotor conflicts and body ownership (Q27315834) (← links)
- Interactional leader-follower sensorimotor communication strategies during repetitive joint actions (Q27339976) (← links)
- Tempo rubato : animacy speeds up time in the brain (Q27438104) (← links)
- The role of shared visual information for joint action coordination (Q28597502) (← links)
- Social cues to joint actions: the role of shared goals (Q28646016) (← links)
- No anticipation-no action: the role of anticipation in action and perception. (Q30319875) (← links)
- Rhythmic movement is attracted more strongly to auditory than to visual rhythms. (Q30333380) (← links)
- Motor interference in interactive contexts (Q30408528) (← links)
- Coordination dynamics in a socially situated nervous system. (Q30466658) (← links)
- From monkey mirror neurons to primate behaviours: possible 'direct' and 'indirect' pathways (Q30479866) (← links)
- Sentence processing: linking language to motor chains (Q30479939) (← links)
- Priming of reach trajectory when observing actions: hand-centred effects (Q30480391) (← links)
- Asymmetric fMRI adaptation reveals no evidence for mirror neurons in humans (Q30488421) (← links)
- Virtual Lesions of the IFG Abolish Response Facilitation for Biological and Non-Biological Cues (Q30493868) (← links)
- How instructions modify perception: an fMRI study investigating brain areas involved in attributing human agency (Q30494922) (← links)
- Disrupting the ventral premotor cortex interferes with the contribution of action observation to use-dependent plasticity (Q30539264) (← links)
- Early and late motor responses to action observation (Q30542495) (← links)
- Keeping an eye on the violinist: motor experts show superior timing consistency in a visual perception task. (Q30547706) (← links)
- Inter-individual differences in audio-motor learning of piano melodies and white matter fiber tract architecture (Q30559464) (← links)
- Atypical interference effect of action observation in autism spectrum conditions (Q30566374) (← links)
- Attending to what matters: flexibility in adults' and infants' action perception (Q30570566) (← links)
- Controlling automatic imitative tendencies: interactions between mirror neuron and cognitive control systems (Q30577308) (← links)
- Interactional synchrony in chimpanzees: Examination through a finger-tapping experiment (Q30649923) (← links)
- Causative role of left aIPS in coding shared goals during human-avatar complementary joint actions (Q30658526) (← links)
- Effects of movement stability and congruency on the emergence of spontaneous interpersonal coordination (Q33351078) (← links)
- Effects of short-term experience on anticipatory eye movements during action observation (Q33359080) (← links)
- Prejudiced interactions: implicit racial bias reduces predictive simulation during joint action with an out-group avatar (Q33556346) (← links)
- STORMy Interactions: Gaze and the Modulation of Mimicry in Adults on the Autism Spectrum. (Q33559259) (← links)
- On interference effects in concurrent perception and action (Q33599137) (← links)
- Automatic versus Voluntary Motor Imitation: Effect of Visual Context and Stimulus Velocity (Q33728103) (← links)
- Dyadic movement synchronization while performing incongruent trajectories requires mutual adaptation (Q33795361) (← links)
- Neuropsychological perspectives on the mechanisms of imitation (Q33831610) (← links)
- Weaving the fabric of social interaction: articulating developmental psychology and cognitive neuroscience in the domain of motor cognition (Q33998322) (← links)
- Muscle contraction and relaxation-response time in response to on or off status of visual stimulus (Q34034614) (← links)
- Attentional demands of movement observation as tested by a dual task approach (Q34071902) (← links)
- Motor contagion during human-human and human-robot interaction (Q34084092) (← links)
- Mimicry of food intake: the dynamic interplay between eating companions (Q34152682) (← links)
- Occlusion of LTP-like plasticity in human primary motor cortex by action observation (Q34305718) (← links)
- Moving just like you: motor interference depends on similar motility of agent and observer. (Q34326368) (← links)
- Movement coordination or movement interference: visual tracking and spontaneous coordination modulate rhythmic movement interference. (Q34427376) (← links)
- Automatic imitation in rhythmical actions: kinematic fidelity and the effects of compatibility, delay, and visual monitoring (Q34447392) (← links)
- And yet they act together: interpersonal perception modulates visuo-motor interference and mutual adjustments during a joint-grasping task (Q34500021) (← links)
- The case of Watson vs. James: effect-priming studies do not support ideomotor theory (Q34562587) (← links)
- Understanding the role of the 'self' in the social priming of mimicry (Q34658233) (← links)
- Neural circuits involved in imitation and perspective-taking (Q34667637) (← links)
- Effects of agency on movement interference during observation of a moving dot stimulus (Q34774539) (← links)