Previous research has investigated the effects of nontarget objects (NTOs) on reach trajectories, but their effects on eye-hand coordination remain to be determined. The current investigation utilized an eye-hand coordination paradigm, where a reaching and grasping task was performed in the presence of an NTO positioned exclusively in the right or left workspace of each right-handed participant. NTOs varied in their closeness to the subject and reach-path, between the starting location of the hand and the target-object of the reach. A control condition, where only the target was present, was also included. When an NTO was presented on the right (ipsilateral to the reaching hand), it pushed the final grasp and gaze locations on the target, shifting them to the left-away from the "obstacle." The impact of the ipsilateral NTO was increased as it was moved into positions closer to the participant that were of greater obstruction to the hand and arm. In contrast, when the NTO was contralateral, the risk of collision was low and participants developed a set reach plan that was repeated nearly identically for each contralateral NTO position. Our findings also indicate that the "invasiveness" of the NTO positions had a greater effect on grasp than it did on gaze position-demonstrating how the arrangement of clutter in an environment can differentially affect gaze and grasp when reaching for an object. (PsycINFO Database Record
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Q J Exp Psychol (Hove)
November 2024
Department of Psychology, University of Campania "Luigi Vanvitelli," Caserta, Italy.
J Exp Child Psychol
January 2025
Institute of Psychology, TU Dortmund University, 44227 Dortmund, Germany. Electronic address:
Research on goal-predictive gaze shifts in infancy so far has mostly focused on the effect of infants' experience with observed actions or the effect of agency cues that the observed agent displays. However, the perspective from which an action is presented to the infants (egocentric vs. allocentric) has received only little attention from researchers despite the fact that the natural observation of own actions is always linked to an egocentric perspective, whereas the observation of others' actions is often linked to an allocentric perspective.
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August 2024
Max-Planck-Institute for Biological Cybernetics, University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany.
Looking leads gaze to objects; seeing recognizes them. Visual crowding makes seeing difficult or impossible before looking brings objects to the fovea. Looking before seeing can be guided by saliency mechanisms in the primary visual cortex (V1).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIEEE J Biomed Health Inform
July 2024
This work tackles the problem of automatically predicting the grasping intention of humans observing their environment, with eye-tracker glasses and video cameras recording the scene view. Our target application is the assistance to people with motor disabilities and potential cognitive impairments, using assistive robotics. Our proposal leverages the analysis of human attention captured in the form of gaze fixations recorded by an eye-tracker on the first person video, as the anticipation of prehension actions is a well studied and well known phenomenon.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neural Eng
July 2024
Sorbonne Université, Institut du Cerveau-Paris Brain Institute-ICM, CNRS, Inria, Inserm, AP-HP, Hôpital de la Pitié Salpêtrière, F-75013 Paris, France.
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