Visual constraints in the development of action.Prog Brain Res. 2007; 164:213-25.PB
Abstract
The chapter's aim is to understand the role of visual information in the control of avoidance and interception behaviors in infancy from the ecological psychology approach to perception and action. We show that during infancy developmental change in action is associated with the use of different information sources and that this process of attunement promotes the perceived action possibilities (affordances). In the final section, we position these findings within Milner and Goodale's two-visual system model, which holds that perception and action are mediated by two functionally and neuron-anatomically separate visual (sub-)systems.
Links
MeSH
Pub Type(s)
Journal Article
Review
Language
eng
PubMed ID
17920433
Citation
Savelsbergh, Geert, et al. "Visual Constraints in the Development of Action." Progress in Brain Research, vol. 164, 2007, pp. 213-25.
Savelsbergh G, Caljouw S, van Hof P, et al. Visual constraints in the development of action. Prog Brain Res. 2007;164:213-25.
Savelsbergh, G., Caljouw, S., van Hof, P., & van der Kamp, J. (2007). Visual constraints in the development of action. Progress in Brain Research, 164, 213-25.
Savelsbergh G, et al. Visual Constraints in the Development of Action. Prog Brain Res. 2007;164:213-25. PubMed PMID: 17920433.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR
T1 - Visual constraints in the development of action.
AU - Savelsbergh,Geert,
AU - Caljouw,Simone,
AU - van Hof,Paulion,
AU - van der Kamp,John,
PY - 2007/10/9/pubmed
PY - 2008/3/1/medline
PY - 2007/10/9/entrez
SP - 213
EP - 25
JF - Progress in brain research
JO - Prog Brain Res
VL - 164
N2 - The chapter's aim is to understand the role of visual information in the control of avoidance and interception behaviors in infancy from the ecological psychology approach to perception and action. We show that during infancy developmental change in action is associated with the use of different information sources and that this process of attunement promotes the perceived action possibilities (affordances). In the final section, we position these findings within Milner and Goodale's two-visual system model, which holds that perception and action are mediated by two functionally and neuron-anatomically separate visual (sub-)systems.
SN - 0079-6123
UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/17920433/Visual_constraints_in_the_development_of_action_
L2 - https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0079-6123(07)64011-4
DB - PRIME
DP - Unbound Medicine
ER -