When Does One Decide How Heavy an Object Feels While Picking It Up?

scientific article published on 27 March 2019

When Does One Decide How Heavy an Object Feels While Picking It Up? is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

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P356DOI10.1177/0956797619837981
P932PMC publication ID6560521
P698PubMed publication ID30917092

P50authorIrene A KulingQ90314443
Eli BrennerQ59689667
Jeroen B.J. SmeetsQ61950544
P2093author name stringMyrthe A Plaisier
P2860cites workAnalysis of methods to determine the latency of online movement adjustmentsQ86702038
The influence of size in weight illusions is unique relative to other object featuresQ91310726
The Size-Weight Illusion is not anti-Bayesian after all: a unifying Bayesian accountQ28276666
Bayesian and "Anti-Bayesian" Biases in Sensory Integration for Action and Perception in the Size-Weight IllusionQ29393332
The information capacity of the human motor system in controlling the amplitude of movementQ30463892
Lifting without seeing: the role of vision in perceiving and acting upon the size weight illusionQ33543118
Deictic codes for the embodiment of cognitionQ33546175
Stimulus information as a determinant of reaction timeQ34232255
Mass is all that matters in the size-weight illusion.Q34388754
Object perception as Bayesian inferenceQ35639022
Object size can influence perceived weight independent of visual estimates of the volume of materialQ36340127
Decision making as a window on cognitionQ37367205
Coding and use of tactile signals from the fingertips in object manipulation tasksQ37437219
Perception-action dissociation generalizes to the size-inertia illusionQ37656027
Getting a grip on heaviness perception: a review of weight illusions and their probable causesQ38201313
How Heavy Is an Illusory Length?Q41164907
Living in a material world: how visual cues to material properties affect the way that we lift objects and perceive their weight.Q47172957
Experimental demonstration of the sensory basis of the size-weight illusionQ47177073
Experience can change distinct size-weight priors engaged in lifting objects and judging their weightsQ47206226
The material-weight illusion revisitedQ47251239
The golf-ball illusion: evidence for top-down processing in weight perceptionQ47282945
Weight perception and the haptic size-weight illusion are functions of the inertia tensorQ47337666
When is a weight not illusory?Q47393278
The role of haptic versus visual volume cues in the size-weight illusionQ47396784
The influence of competing perceptual and motor priors in the context of the size-weight illusion.Q47424841
Expectation in perceptual decision making: neural and computational mechanismsQ47718806
Audiovisual perception: Implicit estimation of sound-arrival timeQ48379008
A mass-density model can account for the size-weight illusionQ49980433
Absolute scaling of sensory magnitudes: a validationQ71312877
Which mechanical invariants are associated with the perception of length and heaviness of a nonvisible handheld rod? Testing the inertia tensor hypothesisQ79844331
Slant cues are processed with different latencies for the online control of movementQ84565289
P304page(s)956797619837981
P577publication date2019-03-27
P1433published inPsychological ScienceQ7256367
P1476titleWhen Does One Decide How Heavy an Object Feels While Picking It Up?

Reverse relations

Q90095508Low-level sensory processes play a more crucial role than high-level cognitive ones in the size-weight illusioncites workP2860

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