People watching : social perceptual, and neurophysiological studies of body perception / edited by Kerri L. Johnson, Maggie Shiffrar.


New York : Oxford University Press, c2013.
Added to CLICnet on 08/28/2015


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Part of the series Oxford series in visual cognition;Oxford series in visual cognition.
Notes:

  • Includes bibliographical references and index.
  • Introduction — Making great strides : advances in research on the perception of the human body — Gunnar johansson, events, and biological motion — Psychophysics — Top-down versus bottom-up processing of biological motion — Seeing you through me : creating self-other correspondences for body perception — What does biological motion really mean? : differentiating visual percepts of human, animal, and non-biological motions — Shape-independent processing of biological motion — Action perception from a common coding perspective — Development and individual differences — Developmental origins of biological motion perception — Experience and the perception of biological motion — Variability in the visual perception of human motion as a function of the observer’s autistic traits — Development of body motion processing in normalcy and pathology — Social perspectives — Person (mis)perception on the biased representation of the human body — It’s the way you walk kinematic specification of vulnerability to attack — Coordinating social beings in motion — Functionalism redux : how adaptive action constrains perception, simulation, and evolved intuitions — Neurophysiology — Neural mechanisms for action observation — Neural mechanisms for biological motion and animacy — The how, when, and why of configural processing in the perception of human movement — Brain mechanisms for social perception : moving towards an understanding of autism — From body perception to action preparation : a distributed neural system for viewing bodily expressions of emotion — Sensory and motor brain areas subserving biological motion perception : neuropsychological and neuroimaging studies — Computational mechanisms of the visual processing of action stimuli.

Subjects:

Requested by Kurpiers, R.

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