The visual control of aimed hand movements to stationary and moving targets
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Cited by (9)
Continuous visual control of interception
2011, Human Movement ScienceCitation Excerpt :Indeed, for reasonably predictable trajectories of a ball, it is not even necessary to see the entire trajectory in order to catch the ball (e.g., López-Moliner, Brenner, Louw, & Smeets, 2010; Whiting & Sharp, 1974). The extent to which vision at various moments is essential for successful interception is widely debated (e.g., Bootsma & van Wieringen, 1990; Dubrowski, Lam, & Carnahan, 2000; Marinovic, Plooy, & Tresilian, 2009; Müller & Abernethy, 2006; Sharp & Whiting, 1974; Teixeira, Chua, Nagelkerke, & Franks, 2006; van Soest et al., 2010; Young & Zelaznik, 1992). If there are moments at which visual information is not very important, it is also unlikely to be necessary to pursue the target at such moments.
The Reach to Grasp Movement of Parkinson's Disease Subjects
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1994, Advances in PsychologyFeedforward and feedback motor control abnormalities implicate cerebellar dysfunctions in autism spectrum disorder
2015, Journal of NeuroscienceMotor abilities in autism: A review using a computational context
2013, Journal of Autism and Developmental DisordersThe relative timing between eye and hand in rapid sequential pointing is affected by time pressure, but not by advance knowledge
2011, Experimental Brain Research
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