نتایج جستجو برای: head movements

تعداد نتایج: 243456  

2015
Toru Maekawa Hirohiko Kaneko Marc H.E. de Lussanet

Theoretically, one can estimate the direction of an object that is relative to the head using vertical disparity if the distance from the head to the object is known. However, several reports describe vertical disparity as having little or no effect on the perception of visual direction. It has been suggested, however, that the visual processes involved in action are different from those involv...

2002
Jeremy N. Bailenson Andrew C. Beall

Nonverbal behavior, particularly gaze direction, plays a crucial function in regulating conversations and providing critical social information. In the current set of studies, we represented interactants in a shared immersive virtual environment (IVE). Interactants sat in physically remote rooms, entered a common virtual room and played games of 20 questions. The interactants were represented b...

Journal: :The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics 2010
Anthony P Pawlak Chris C Tang Cathy Pederson Martin B Wolske Mark O West

To investigate striatal mechanisms underlying the acute effects of stimulants on motor behavior, firing rates (FRs) of striatal neurons related specifically to vertical head movement were studied exclusively during vertical head movements. Precocaine FRs were recorded after intraperitoneal saline injection (time 1; T1), and rats performed conditioned vertical head movements (>10,000) similar to...

Journal: :Journal of neurophysiology 2007
Neeraj J Gandhi David L Sparks

Natural movements often include actions integrated across multiple effectors. Coordinated eye-head movements are driven by a command to shift the line of sight by a desired displacement vector. Yet because extraocular and neck motoneurons are separate entities, the gaze shift command must be separated into independent signals for eye and head movement control. We report that this separation occ...

Journal: :Perception 2012
April Ash Stephen Palmisano

We examined the vection induced by consistent and conflicting multisensory information about self-motion. Observers viewed displays simulating constant-velocity self-motion in depth while physically oscillating their heads left-right or back-forth in time with a metronome. Their tracked head movements were either ignored or incorporated directly into the self-motion display (as an added simulat...

Journal: :The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 1992
R Y Litovsky R K Clifton

Six-month-old infants have been found to respond differentially to sounding objects placed within reach and beyond reach when no visual cues were available. The goal of the present study was to investigate whether sound-pressure level (SPL) serves as an auditory cue in distance discrimination. Thirty-two 6-month-olds were presented with recordings of sounding objects first in the light at midli...

Journal: :Attention, perception & psychophysics 2011
Allison A Brennan Marcus R Watson Alan Kingstone James T Enns

Does person perception--the impressions we form from watching others--hold clues to the mental states of people engaged in cognitive tasks? We investigated this with a two-phase method: In Phase 1, participants searched on a computer screen (Experiment 1) or in an office (Experiment 2); in Phase 2, other participants rated the searchers' video-recorded behavior. The results showed that blind ra...

Journal: :Journal of sports sciences 1999
L Marin B G Bardy R J Bootsma

In this study, we considered the interacting effects of expertise in gymnastics, the type of support surface and the required frequency of head movement on the emergence of postural modes of coordination. A group of elite female gymnasts and a control group of non-gymnasts were asked to track the fore-aft motion of a target with their heads. Two support surface conditions (a balance beam vs the...

Journal: :Journal of personality and social psychology 2003
Pablo Briñol Richard E Petty

The authors report 3 experiments that examine a new mechanism by which overt head movements can affect attitude change. In each experiment, participants were induced to either nod or to shake their heads while listening to a persuasive message. When the message arguments were strong, nodding produced more persuasion than shaking. When the arguments were weak, the reverse occurred. These effects...

Journal: :Journal of personality and social psychology 1996
J Förster F Strack

The present article reports 3 studies that demonstrate the influence of overt behavior on recognition and elucidates the theoretical basis for such an influence. In 2 experiments it was found that participants who were induced to nod while incidentally encoding positive and negative adjectives were more likely to recognize positive adjectives, whereas participants who were induced to shake thei...

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