Results 261 to 270 of about 4,879,813 (280)
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The Thatcher Effect in Biological Motion
Perception, 2011We demonstrate the Thatcher effect in biological-motion displays and show that it is primarily a result of the moving, and not static, cues in the display.
Eric Hiris, Aaron Mirenzi
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Motion Induction from Biological Motion
Perception, 2003A new type of motion illusion is described in which ambiguous motion becomes unidirectional on superimposition of a human figure walking on a treadmill. A point-light walker in profile was superimposed on a vertical counterphase grating backdrop. Eleven naïve observers judged the apparent direction of motion against the grating as left or right in a ...
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Aging and the Perception of Biological Motion.
Psychology and Aging, 2004Two experiments examined how observers' ability to perceive biological motion changes with increasing age. The observers discriminated among kinetic figures, depicting walking, jogging, and skipping. The direction, duration, and temporal correspondence of the motions were manipulated.
J. Farley Norman+3 more
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Transsaccadic integration of biological motion.
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 1994In a transsaccadic integration paradigm, Ss had to detect saccade-contingent changes in a moving point-light walker. First, the nature of the object representation surviving a saccade was examined. The low detection of changes in the image-plane position of the figure and the high detection of changes in the upright walker's in-depth orientation ...
J Van Rensbergen+2 more
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2002
The paper discusses the detailed analysis of visual speech. As with other forms of biological motion, humans are known to be very sensitive to the realism in the ways the lips move. In order to determine the elements that come to play in the perceptual analysis of visual speech, it is important to have control over the data.
Pascal Müller+2 more
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The paper discusses the detailed analysis of visual speech. As with other forms of biological motion, humans are known to be very sensitive to the realism in the ways the lips move. In order to determine the elements that come to play in the perceptual analysis of visual speech, it is important to have control over the data.
Pascal Müller+2 more
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Binding biological motion and visual features in working memory.
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2015Working memory mechanisms for binding have been examined extensively in the last decade, yet few studies have explored bindings relating to human biological motion (BM).
Xiaowei Ding+5 more
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Developmental Psychology, 2014
In human newborns, spontaneous visual preference for biological motion is reported to occur at birth, but the factors underpinning this preference are still in debate.
Christel Bidet-Ildei+4 more
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In human newborns, spontaneous visual preference for biological motion is reported to occur at birth, but the factors underpinning this preference are still in debate.
Christel Bidet-Ildei+4 more
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Holding biological motion information in working memory.
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2014Working memory (WM) mechanisms for verbal, spatial, and object information have been extensively examined, yet those for kinetic information are less known.
M. Shen+4 more
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The first time ever I saw your feet: inversion effect in newborns' sensitivity to biological motion.
Developmental Psychology, 2014Inversion effect in biological motion perception has been recently attributed to an innate sensitivity of the visual system to the gravity-dependent dynamic of the motion.
L. Bardi, L. Regolin, F. Simion
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