Getting a grip on heaviness perception: a review of weight illusions and their probable causes

scientific article published on 02 April 2014

Getting a grip on heaviness perception: a review of weight illusions and their probable causes is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P6179Dimensions Publication ID1030240693
P356DOI10.1007/S00221-014-3926-9
P698PubMed publication ID24691760

P50authorGavin BuckinghamQ47172992
P2093author name stringGavin Buckingham
P2860cites workMaterial evidence: interaction of well-learned priors and sensorimotor memory when lifting objects.Q50801757
Effect of fatigue on force sensationQ71824880
Bayesian and "Anti-Bayesian" Biases in Sensory Integration for Action and Perception in the Size-Weight IllusionQ29393332
Perceptual Learning: Inverting the Size–Weight IllusionQ29543939
Lifting without seeing: the role of vision in perceiving and acting upon the size weight illusionQ33543118
Charpentier (1891) on the size-weight illusionQ33794661
Mass is all that matters in the size-weight illusion.Q34388754
Impetus beliefs as default heuristics: dissociation between explicit and implicit knowledge about motionQ34432625
Size matters: a single representation underlies our perceptions of heaviness in the size-weight illusion.Q34571299
Alterations in perceived heaviness during digital anaesthesiaQ39367845
Visual size cues in the programming of manipulative forces during precision gripQ43684373
Charpentier's papers of 1886 and 1891 on weight perception and the size-weight illusionQ44063937
Development of human precision grip. III. Integration of visual size cues during the programming of isometric forcesQ44187166
Living in a material world: how visual cues to material properties affect the way that we lift objects and perceive their weight.Q47172957
Experience can change distinct size-weight priors engaged in lifting objects and judging their weightsQ47206226
Dissociable neural mechanisms for determining the perceived heaviness of objects and the predicted weight of objects during lifting: an fMRI investigation of the size-weight illusion.Q47215548
The size of the visual size cue used for programming manipulative forces during precision gripQ47221980
Coming to grips with weight perception: effects of grasp configuration on perceived heavinessQ47228061
Independence of perceptual and sensorimotor predictions in the size-weight illusionQ47236471
The material-weight illusion revisitedQ47251239
Why Barbie feels heavier than Ken: the influence of size-based expectancies and social cues on the illusory perception of weightQ47281670
The golf-ball illusion: evidence for top-down processing in weight perceptionQ47282945
Perceptions of effort and heaviness during fatigue and during the size-weight illusionQ47316741
Weight perception and the haptic size-weight illusion are functions of the inertia tensorQ47337666
Opposite perceptual and sensorimotor responses to a size-weight illusion.Q47340237
Effects of surface texture on weight perception when lifting objects with a precision gripQ47356440
Characterization of the Haptic Shape-Weight Illusion with 3D ObjectsQ47369075
When is a weight not illusory?Q47393278
The material-weight illusion induced by expectations aloneQ47394704
The role of haptic versus visual volume cues in the size-weight illusionQ47396784
A developmental and analytic study of the size-weight illusionQ47405686
AN EXPERIMENTAL EXAMINATION OF THE SIZE-WEIGHT ILLUSION IN YOUNG CHILDREN.Q47421899
The influence of competing perceptual and motor priors in the context of the size-weight illusion.Q47424841
The brightness-weight illusionQ47436662
Felt heaviness is used to perceive the affordance for throwing but rotational inertia does not affect eitherQ48320423
P433issue6
P304page(s)1623-1629
P577publication date2014-04-02
P1433published inExperimental Brain ResearchQ13358841
P1476titleGetting a grip on heaviness perception: a review of weight illusions and their probable causes
P478volume232

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q49980433A mass-density model can account for the size-weight illusion
Q90227992Can resources save rationality? "Anti-Bayesian" updating in cognition and perception
Q48764742Cognitive attribution of the source of an error in object-lifting results in differences in motor generalization
Q90715591Cold and heavy: grasping the temperature-weight illusion
Q47267539Contribution of surface material and size to the expected versus the perceived weight of objects.
Q38722024Cross-Sensory Correspondences: Heaviness is Dark and Low-Pitched.
Q41027219Distinct contributions of explicit and implicit memory processes to weight prediction when lifting objects and judging their weights: an aging study
Q90528937Does gesture strengthen sensorimotor knowledge of objects? The case of the size-weight illusion
Q91012361Dynamic size-weight changes after object lifting reduce the size-weight illusion
Q57582252End Effector for a Kinesthetic Haptic Device Capable of Displaying Variable Size and Stiffness
Q89561004Examining Whether Semantic Cues Can Affect Felt Heaviness When Lifting Novel Objects
Q93092531Exploring how material cues drive sensorimotor prediction across different levels of autistic-like traits
Q64935024Getting a grasp on action-specific scaling: A response to Witt (2017).
Q35634165How Weight Affects the Perceived Spacing between the Thumb and Fingers during Grasping
Q47555890Illusory visual-depth reversal can modulate sensations of contact surface.
Q92498226Influence of visually perceived shape and brightness on perceived size, expected weight, and perceived weight of 3D objects
Q90095508Low-level sensory processes play a more crucial role than high-level cognitive ones in the size-weight illusion
Q90575185Memory influences haptic perception of softness
Q92866711Move on up: Fingertip forces and felt heaviness are modulated by the goal of the lift
Q36340127Object size can influence perceived weight independent of visual estimates of the volume of material
Q41807828Perceiving and acting upon weight illusions in the absence of somatosensory information
Q90338223Preserved Object Weight Processing after Bilateral Lateral Occipital Complex Lesions
Q40336285Rapid decrement in the effects of the Ponzo display dissociates action and perception.
Q42004266Sensorimotor Memory Biases Weight Perception During Object Lifting.
Q35174758Smaller = denser, and the brain knows it: natural statistics of object density shape weight expectations
Q49580864Stability of Kinesthetic Perception in Efferent-Afferent Spaces: The Concept of Iso-perceptual Manifold
Q36783079The Influence of Prior Knowledge on Perception and Action: Relationships to Autistic Traits.
Q47225511The National Football League-225 Bench Press Test and the Size-Weight Illusion
Q47403945The impact of unilateral brain damage on weight perception, sensorimotor anticipation, and fingertip force adaptation.
Q49908044The impact of using an upper-limb prosthesis on the perception of real and illusory weight differences
Q57476669The material-weight illusion is a Bayes-optimal percept under competing density priors
Q47417246The size-weight illusion induced through human echolocation
Q92611735Visual cues, expectations, and sensorimotor memories in the prediction and perception of object dynamics during manipulation
Q92651924When Does One Decide How Heavy an Object Feels While Picking It Up?

Search more.