Spatial S-R compatibility under head tilt
Abstract Spatial stimulus-response (S-R) compatibility was investigated for different head positions. Subjects reacted with their right or left hand to a light presented to the right or left of a fixation point, pressing the spatially compatible or the spatially incompatible response key.
P, Schroeder-Heister +2 more
openaire +2 more sources
Constrained tGAP for generalisation between scales: the case of Dutch topographic data [PDF]
This article presents the results of integrating large- and medium-scale data into a unified data structure. This structure can be used as a single non-redundant representation for the input data, which can be queried at any arbitrary scale between the ...
Dilo, Arta +2 more
core +3 more sources
Compatibility between object size and response side in grasping: the left hand prefers smaller objects, the right hand prefers larger objects [PDF]
It has been proposed that the brain processes quantities such as space, size, number, and other magnitudes using a common neural metric, and that this common representation system reflects a direct link to motor control, because the integration of ...
Christian Seegelke, Peter Wühr
doaj +2 more sources
Strong Well-Posedness for a Class of Dynamic Outflow Boundary Conditions for Incompressible Newtonian Flows [PDF]
Based on energy considerations, we derive a class of dynamic outflow boundary conditions for the incompressible Navier-Stokes equations, containing the well-known convective boundary condition but incorporating also the stress at the outlet.
Bothe, Dieter +2 more
core +1 more source
Improved Thermoelectric Cooling Based on the Thomson Effect [PDF]
Traditional thermoelectric Peltier coolers exhibit a cooling limit which is primarily determined by the figure of merit, zT. Rather than a fundamental thermodynamic limit, this bound can be traced to the difficulty of maintaining thermoelectric ...
B. Moizhes +15 more
core +2 more sources
Focusing on body sites: the role of spatial attention in action perception. [PDF]
Humans use the same representations to code self-produced and observed actions. Neurophysiological evidence for this view comes from the discovery of the so-called mirror neurons in premotor cortex of the macaque monkey.
Bach, P, Peatfield, NA, Tipper, SP
core +2 more sources
Compatibility Between Physical Stimulus Size – Spatial Position and False Recognitions
Magnitude processing is of great interest to researchers because it requires integration of quantity related information in memory regardless of whether the focus is numerical or non-numerical magnitudes.
Seda Dural +6 more
doaj +1 more source
BackgroundDistrict heating is widely used for thermal energy supply and offers a broad range of benefits like the possibility to integrate decentral heat supply technologies or to foster the utilisation of renewable energy sources. Thus, district heating
Peter Lichtenwoehrer +3 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Time course analyses confirm independence of automatic imitation and spatial compatibility effects [PDF]
Automatic imitation has been used as a behavioural index of the functioning of the human mirror system (e.g. Brass, Bekkering, Wohlschlager, & Prinz, 2000; Heyes, Bird, Johnson, & Haggard, 2005; Kilner, Paulignan, & Blakemore, 2003).
Catmur, C., Heyes, C.
core
Antiferromagnetic Domains and Superconductivity in UPt3
We explore the response of an unconventional superconductor to spatially inhomogeneous antiferromagnetism (SIAFM). Symmetry allows the superconducting order parameter in the E-representation models for UPt3 to couple directly to the AFM order parameter ...
A. Garg +61 more
core +1 more source

