Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.Material evidence: interaction of well-learned priors and sensorimotor memory when lifting objects
Lee A. Baugh et al.
JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY (2012)
The material-weight illusion induced by expectations alone
Gavin Buckingham et al.
ATTENTION PERCEPTION & PSYCHOPHYSICS (2011)
Bayesian and Anti-Bayesian Biases in Sensory Integration for Action and Perception in the Size-Weight Illusion
Jordan B. Brayanov et al.
JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY (2010)
Lifting without Seeing: The Role of Vision in Perceiving and Acting upon the Size Weight Illusion
Gavin Buckingham et al.
PLOS ONE (2010)
The influence of competing perceptual and motor priors in the context of the size-weight illusion
Gavin Buckingham et al.
EXPERIMENTAL BRAIN RESEARCH (2010)
Perceptual Learning: Inverting the Size-Weight Illusion
Marc O. Ernst
CURRENT BIOLOGY (2009)
Living in A Material World: How Visual Cues to Material Properties Affect the Way That We Lift Objects and Perceive Their Weight
Gavin Buckingham et al.
JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY (2009)
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
Philippe A. Chouinard et al.
NEUROIMAGE (2009)
Experience Can Change Distinct Size-Weight Priors Engaged in Lifting Objects and Judging their Weights
J. Randall Flanagan et al.
CURRENT BIOLOGY (2008)
Why Barbie feels heavier than Ken: The influence of size-based expectancies and social cues on the illusory perception of weight
Anton J. M. Dijker
COGNITION (2008)
Opposite perceptual and sensorimotor responses to a size-weight illusion
Mathew S. Grandy et al.
JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY (2006)
Independence of perceptual and sensorimotor predictions in the size-weight illusion
JR Flanagan et al.
NATURE NEUROSCIENCE (2000)