【知覚と行動のおける共通のメカニズム】
Common Mechanisms in Perception and Action:Attention and Performance Volume XIX (Attention and Performance Series, Vol. XIX)
内容
目次
EDITOR'S INTRODUCTION; 1. Common mechanisms in perception and action;ASSOCIATION LECTURE; 2. Sequential effects of dimensional overlap: findingsand issues; PART 1: SPACE PERCEPTION AND SPATIALLY ORIENTED ACTION; 3.Perception and action: what, how, when, and why; 4. Several 'vision foraction' systems: a guide to dissociating and integrating dorsal and ventralfunctions (tutorial); 5. Attention and visually guided behaviour in distinctsystems; 6. How the brain represents the body: insights from neurophysiologyand psychology; 7. Action planning affect spatial localization; 8. Theperception and representation of human locomotion; PART 2: TIMING INPERCEPTION AND ACTION; 9. Perspectives on the timing of events and actions;10. Movement timing: a tutorial; 11. Timing mechanisms in sensorimotorsynchronization; 12. The embodiment of musical structure: effects of musicalcontext on sensorimotor synchronization with complex timing patterns; 13.Action, binding and awareness; PART 3: ACTION PERCEPTION AND IMITATION; 14.Processing mechanisms and neural structures involved in the recognition andproduction of actions; 15. Action perception and imitation: a tutorial; 16.Observing a human or a robotic hand grasping an object: differential motorpriming effects; 17. Action representation and the inferior parietal lobule;18. Coding of visible and hidden actions; 19. The visual analysis of bodilymotion; PART 4: CONTENT-SPECIFIC INTERACTIONS BETWEEN PERCEPTION AND ACTION;20. Content-specific interactions between perception and action; 21. Motorcompetence in teh perception of dynamic events: a tutorial; 22. Eliminating,magnifying, and reversing spatial compatibility effect with mixedlocation-relevant and irrelevant trials; 23. Does stimulus-driven responseactivation underlie the Simon effect?; 24. Activation and suppression inconflict tasks: empirical classification through distributional analyses; 25.Response-evoked interference in visual encoding; 26. Interaction betweenfeature binding in perception and action; PART 5: COORDINATION ANDINTEGRATION IN PERCEPTION AND ACTION; 27. Coordination and integration inperception and action; 28. From perception to action: making the connection -a tutorial; 29. The dimensional-action system: a distinct visual system; 30.Selection-for-perception and selection-for-spatial-motor-action are coupledby visual attention: a review of recent findings and new evidence fromstimulus-driven saccade control; 31. Response features in the coordination ofperception and action; 32. Effect anticipation in action planning; 33. Therepresentational nature of sequence learning: evidence for goal-based codes