All Stories

  1. Parahippocampal cortex is involved in material processing via echoes in blind echolocation experts
  2. Representation of Object Weight in Human Ventral Visual Cortex
  3. Are visual texture-selective areas recruited during haptic texture discrimination?
  4. The role of head movements in the discrimination of 2-D shape by blind echolocation experts
  5. A blind human expert echolocator shows size constancy for objects perceived by echoes
  6. How (and why) the visual control of action differs from visual perception
  7. DF's visual brain in action: The role of tactile cues
  8. Variability-based Garner interference for perceptual estimations but not for grasping
  9. Observing object lifting errors modulates cortico-spinal excitability and improves object lifting performance
  10. Separate visual systems for perception and action: a framework for understanding cortical visual impairment
  11. Explicit knowledge about the availability of visual feedback affects grasping with the left but not the right hand
  12. fMRI reveals a lower visual field preference for hand actions in human superior parieto-occipital cortex (SPOC) and precuneus
  13. Grasping without vision: Time normalizing grip aperture profiles yields spurious grip scaling to target size
  14. Acute Alcohol Consumption Impairs Controlled but Not Automatic Processes in a Psychophysical Pointing Paradigm
  15. Sight Unseen
  16. When the predictive brain gets it really wrong
  17. Shape-specific activation of occipital cortex in an early blind echolocation expert
  18. Gender-selective neural populations: evidence from event-related fMRI repetition suppression
  19. Size Matters: A Single Representation Underlies Our Perceptions of Heaviness in the Size-Weight Illusion
  20. A brief review of the role of training in near-tool effects
  21. Handedness, laterality and the size-weight illusion
  22. Retinotopic organization of the visual cortex before and after decompression of the optic chiasm in a patient with pituitary macroadenoma
  23. Does grasping in patient D.F. depend on vision?
  24. Retinotopic activity in V1 reflects the perceived and not the retinal size of an afterimage
  25. FMRI-adaptation to highly-rendered color photographs of animals and manipulable artifacts during a classification task
  26. Brain areas involved in echolocation motion processing in blind echolocation experts
  27. Bringing the real world into the fMRI scanner: Repetition effects for pictures versus real objects
  28. Transforming vision into action
  29. Programs for action in superior parietal cortex: A triple-pulse TMS investigation
  30. Impaired delayed but preserved immediate grasping in a neglect patient with parieto-occipital lesions
  31. Mental blocks: fMRI reveals top-down modulation of early visual cortex when obstacles interfere with grasp planning
  32. Neural Correlates of Natural Human Echolocation in Early and Late Blind Echolocation Experts
  33. The role of apparent size in building- and object-specific regions of ventral visual cortex
  34. Reaction times for allocentric movements are 35 ms slower than reaction times for target-directed movements
  35. Face Inversion Reduces the Persistence of Global Form and Its Neural Correlates
  36. Converging evidence for diverging pathways: Neuropsychology and psychophysics tell the same story
  37. Grasping the non-conscious: Preserved grip scaling to unseen objects for immediate but not delayed grasping following a unilateral lesion to primary visual cortex
  38. Integration of visual and auditory information for hand actions: preliminary evidence for the contribution of natural sounds to grasping
  39. Neural Substrates of Visual Spatial Coding and Visual Feedback Control for Hand Movements in Allocentric and Target-Directed Tasks
  40. Selection of wrist posture in conditions of motor ambiguity
  41. Short-term motor plasticity revealed in a visuomotor decision-making task
  42. The material–weight illusion induced by expectations alone
  43. Cortical visual systems for perception and action*
  44. Reaching for the unknown: Multiple target encoding and real-time decision-making in a rapid reach task
  45. The influence of competing perceptual and motor priors in the context of the size–weight illusion
  46. Lifting without Seeing: The Role of Vision in Perceiving and Acting upon the Size Weight Illusion
  47. Two visual streams: Interconnections do not imply duplication of function
  48. Can intention override the “automatic pilot”?
  49. Action and Vision
  50. Category-specific neural processing for naming pictures of animals and naming pictures of tools: An ALE meta-analysis
  51. Seeing all the obstacles in your way: the effect of visual feedback and visual feedback schedule on obstacle avoidance while reaching
  52. Contribution of visual and proprioceptive information to the precision of reaching movements
  53. FMRI adaptation during performance of learned arbitrary visuomotor conditional associations
  54. Hand preference for precision grasping predicts language lateralization
  55. Integration of haptic and visual size cues in perception and action revealed through cross-modal conflict
  56. Enhanced detection of visual targets on the hand and familiar tools
  57. Abnormal face identity coding in the middle fusiform gyrus of two brain-damaged prosopagnosic patients
  58. An investigation of auditory contagious yawning
  59. Why color synesthesia involves more than color
  60. The lateral-occipital and the inferior-frontal cortex play different roles during the naming of visually presented objects
  61. Vision in the palm of your hand
  62. Differential effects of delay upon visually and haptically guided grasping and perceptual judgments
  63. Updating the programming of a precision grip is a function of recent history of available feedback
  64. Thinking outside the box
  65. Preserved Striate Cortex is Not Sufficient to Support the McCollough Effect: Evidence from two Patients with Cerebral Achromatopsia
  66. Koniocellular projections and hand-assisted blindsight
  67. Action without perception in human vision
  68. Crinkling and crumpling: An auditory fMRI study of material properties
  69. Direct effects of prismatic lenses on visuomotor control: an event-related functional MRI study
  70. fMR-adaptation reveals separate processing regions for the perception of form and texture in the human ventral stream
  71. Grasping Other Minds
  72. Missing in action: the effect of obstacle position and size on avoidance while reaching
  73. Repetition suppression in occipital–temporal visual areas is modulated by physical rather than semantic features of objects
  74. Grasping future events: explicit knowledge of the availability of visual feedback fails to reliably influence prehension
  75. Voice recognition and the posterior cingulate: An fMRI study of prosopagnosia
  76. A Double Dissociation Between Action and Perception in the Context of Visual Illusions
  77. A hand in blindsight: Hand placement near target improves size perception in the blind visual field
  78. Action Rules: Why the Visual Control of Reaching and Grasping is Not Always Influenced by Perceptual Illusions
  79. Independent Processing of Form, Colour, and Texture in Object Perception
  80. Duplex Vision: Separate Cortical Pathways for Conscious Perception and the Control of Action
  81. The intermanual transfer of anticipatory force control in precision grip lifting is not influenced by the perception of weight
  82. FMRI Reveals a Dissociation between Grasping and Perceiving the Size of Real 3D Objects
  83. Coming to grips with vision and touch
  84. Effector-specific fields for motor preparation in the human frontal cortex
  85. Orientation sensitivity to graspable objects: An fMRI adaptation study
  86. Visual processing in the primate visual cortex
  87. The relationship between fMRI adaptation and repetition priming
  88. Distorting visual space with sound
  89. Flicking, pointing, and perceiving the illusion
  90. Pointing to places and spaces in a patient with visual form agnosia
  91. A double dissociation between sensitivity to changes in object identity and object orientation in the ventral and dorsal visual streams: A human fMRI study
  92. The fusiform face area is not sufficient for face recognition: Evidence from a patient with dense prosopagnosia and no occipital face area
  93. A model of the coupling between grip aperture and hand transport during human prehension
  94. The effects of landmarks on the performance of delayed and real-time pointing movements
  95. Peripheral vision for perception and action
  96. Interactions between the processing of gaze direction and facial expression
  97. Visual motion due to eye movements helps guide the hand
  98. The involvement of the “fusiform face area” in processing facial expression
  99. No evidence for visuomotor priming in a visually guided action task
  100. Behavioral and Neuroimaging Evidence for a Contribution of Color and Texture Information to Scene Classification in a Patient with Visual Form Agnosia
  101. The eyes have it
  102. Plans for action
  103. Spared somatomotor and cognitive functions in a patient with a large porencephalic cyst revealed by fMRI
  104. Visual control of action but not perception requires analytical processing of object shape
  105. FMRI evidence for a 'parietal reach region' in the human brain
  106. A haptic size-contrast illusion affects size perception but not grasping
  107. Visually guided grasping produces fMRI activation in dorsal but not ventral stream brain areas
  108. The Effects of Different Aperture-Viewing Conditions on the Recognition of Novel Objects
  109. The influence of visual motion on fast reaching movements to a stationary object
  110. Perceptual illusion and the real-time control of action
  111. Measuring unconscious actions in action-blindsight: exploring the kinematics of pointing movements to targets in the blind field of two patients with cortical hemianopia
  112. Learned perceptual associations influence visuomotor programming under limited conditions: kinematic consistency
  113. Learned perceptual associations influence visuomotor programming under limited conditions: cues as surface patterns
  114. Human fMRI evidence for the neural correlates of preparatory set
  115. Differential Effects of Viewpoint on Object-Driven Activation in Dorsal and Ventral Streams
  116. Selective, Non-lateralized Impairment of Motor Imagery Following Right Parietal Damage
  117. A temporal analysis of grasping in the Ebbinghaus illusion: planning versus online control
  118. Grasping two-dimensional images and three-dimensional objects in visual-form agnosia
  119. Understanding the contribution of binocular vision to the control of adaptive locomotion
  120. Selective, Non-lateralized Impairment of Motor Imagery Following Right Parietal Damage
  121. Haptic study of three-dimensional objects activates extrastriate visual areas
  122. Superior performance for visually guided pointing in the lower visual field
  123. The dissociation between perception and action in the Ebbinghaus illusion
  124. Manipulating and recognizing virtual objects: Where the action is.
  125. The Effect of Learned Perceptual Associations on Visuomotor Programming Varies with Kinematic Demands
  126. An fMRI study of the selective activation of human extrastriate form vision areas by radial and concentric gratings
  127. Visual search selectively enhances recognition of the search target
  128. The effects of visual object priming on brain activation before and after recognition
  129. Independent effects of pictorial displays on perception and action
  130. A visible difference
  131. Blindsight: A conscious route to unconscious vision
  132. Active manual control of object views facilitates visual recognition
  133. Repetition priming and the time course of object recognition
  134. Probing Unconscious Visual Processing with the McCollough Effect
  135. The objects of action and perception
  136. Visuomotor control: Where does vision end and action begin?
  137. Near, Far, or In Between?—Target Edges and the Transport Component of Prehension
  138. The Effect of Pictorial Illusion on Prehension and Perception
  139. Oral contraceptive use affects manual praxis but not simple visually guided movements
  140. Differences in perceived shape from shading correlate with activity in early visual areas
  141. Obstacle avoidance during locomotion is unaffected in a patient with visual form agnosia
  142. A neurological dissociation between shape from shading and shape from edges
  143. Preserved visual imagery in visual form agnosia
  144. Dissociation between two modes of spatial processing by a visual form agnosic
  145. Image and Brain: The Resolution of the Imagery Debate
  146. Size-contrast illusions deceive the eye but not the hand
  147. The McCollough effect reveals orientation discrimination in a case of cortical blindness
  148. The Role of Surface Information in Object Recognition: Studies of a Visual Form Agnosic and Normal Subjects
  149. Separate neural pathways for the visual analysis of object shape in perception and prehension
  150. Visual pathways supporting perception and action in the primate cerebral cortex
  151. Grasping versus pointing and the differential use of visual feedback
  152. The role of binocular vision in prehension: a kinematic analysis
  153. Now you see it, now you don't: How delaying an action system can transform a theory
  154. The McCollough Effect Reveals Orientation Discrimination in a Case of Cortical Blindness
  155. Separate visual pathways for perception and action
  156. Orientation Discrimination in a Visual Form Agnosic: Evidence from the McCollough Effect
  157. Vision And Action: The Control Of Grasping, edited by Melvyn A. Goodale Ablex Publishing Corp., Norwood, New Jersey, 1990, viii + 354 pp., author index, subject index (£39.95).
  158. Computation of Absolute Distance in the Mongolian Gerbil (Meriones unguiculatus): Depth Algorithms and Neural Substrates
  159. Blindsight in rodents: The use of a ‘high-level’ distance cue in gerbils with lesions of primary visual cortex
  160. The role of image size and retinal motion in the computation of absolute distance by the Mongolian gerbil (Meriones unguiculatus)
  161. Kinematic analysis of limb movements in neuropsychological research: Subtle deficits and recovery of function.
  162. The Effects of Instructions to Subjects on the Programming of Visually Directed Reaching Movements
  163. The Effects of Time and Distance on Accuracy of Target-Directed Locomotion
  164. Hemispheric differences in motor control
  165. Left-sided oral asymmetries in spontaneous but not posed smiles
  166. Oral asymmetries during verbal and non-verbal movements of the mouth
  167. Interocular transfer in the pigeon after lesions of the dorsal supraoptic decussation
  168. Distance estimation in the mongolian gerbil: The role of dynamic depth cues
  169. Eye Movements of Human Albinos
  170. Visuomotor Organization of Pecking in the Pigeon
  171. Visually Guided Pecking in the Pigeon <i>(Columba livia)</i>
  172. Visual sampling after lesions of the superior colliculus in rats.
  173. The effects of lesions of the superior colliculus on locomotor orientation and the orienting reflex in the rat
  174. Separate Visual Systems for Action and Perception