0000-0002-4777-2249
Psychology's Theory Crisis, and Why Formal Modelling Cannot Solve It
robustclearexciting
Nurturing Scientific Innovation: A Call to Reviewers and Editors
The role of beliefs about perception in perceptual inference
Active inference and speech motor control: a review and theory
Surprise impairs perception of surprising, and incidental, events
Autistic adults exhibit typical sensitivity to changes in interpersonal distance
Sensitivity to changes in interpersonal distance: the effects of dyad arrangement and orientation
Sixty years of predictive perception
Impaired sensitivity to spatial configurations in healthy aging
Cancelling cancellation? Sensorimotor control, agency, and prediction
Stubborn predictions in primary visual cortex
Updating perceptual expectations as certainty diminishes
Action Enhances Predicted Touch
Action biases perceptual decisions toward expected outcomes.
Illusions of control without delusions of grandeur
Beliefs and desires in the predictive brain.
Association between action kinematics and emotion perception across adolescence.
Action enhances predicted touch
Learning to Perceive and Perceiving to Learn.
The Perceptual Prediction Paradox.
Perceptual Prediction: Rapidly Making Sense of a Noisy World.
Atypical emotion recognition from bodies is associated with perceptual difficulties in healthy aging.
The Predictive Brain as a Stubborn Scientist
Action sharpens sensory representations of expected outcomes
Adults with autism spectrum disorder are sensitive to the kinematic features defining natural human motion
Brief Report: Typical Auditory-Motor and Enhanced Visual-Motor Temporal Synchronization in Adults with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Sensory predictions during action support perception of imitative reactions across suprasecond delays
Crossmodal classification of mu rhythm activity during action observation and execution suggests specificity to somatosensory features of actions
Observation our own action kinematics predict the perceived affective states of others
Predicted action consequences are perceptually facilitated before cancellation
Time on your hands: Perceived duration of sensory events is biased toward concurrent actions
Can Neurotypical Individuals Read Autistic Facial Expressions? Atypical Production of Emotional Facial Expressions in Autism Spectrum Disorders
Interaction takes two: Typical adults exhibit mind-blindness towards those with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Beyond action-specific simulation: Domain-general motor contributions to perception
Cross-modal repetition effects in the mu rhythm indicate tactile mirroring during action observation
Mirror Neurons from Associative Learning
Back to the future: Synaesthesia could be due to associative learning
Mirror neurons: From origin to function
Mirror neurons: Tests and testability
Motor contributions to the perception of relative phase
Moving time: The influence of action on duration perception
Task-dependent and distinct roles of the temporoparietal junction and inferior frontal cortex in the control of imitation
Atypical basic movement kinematics in autism spectrum conditions
Autistic traits modulate mimicry of social but not nonsocial rewards
The time course of eye movements during action observation reflects sequence learning
Dissociable roles of human inferior frontal gyrus during action execution and observation
fMRI Evidence of 'Mirror' Responses to Geometric Shapes
Action observation and robotic agents: Learning and anthropomorphism
Dynamic modulation of human motor activity when observing actions
Learning to understand others' actions
The role of alexithymia in reduced eye-fixation in autism spectrum conditions
Acquisition of automatic imitation is sensitive to sensorimotor contingency
Action preparation helps and hinders perception of action
Intact imitation of emotional facial actions in autism spectrum conditions
Shaking hands: Priming by social action effects
Imitation of lateralised body movements: Doing it the hard way
The Roles of Feature-Specific Task Set and Bottom-Up Salience in Attentional Capture: An ERP Study
Automatic imitation of intransitive actions
Stimulus-driven selection of routes to imitation
Visuotactile learning and body representation: An ERP study with rubber hands and rubber objects
ERP correlates of shared control mechanisms involved in saccade preparation and in covert attention
Intact automatic imitation of human and robot actions in autism spectrum disorders
Sensorimotor experience enhances automatic imitation of robotic action
Bottom-up, not top-down, modulation of imitation by human and robotic models
Manual response preparation and saccade programming are linked to attention shifts: ERP evidence for covert attentional orienting and spatially specific modulations of visual processing
Shared representations in body perception
The brain's fingers and hands
Robotic movement elicits automatic imitation
Visual enhancement of touch in spatial body representation