Research Topics
| Hugo BruggemanSummaryAffiliation: Brown University Country: USA Publications
| Collaborators |
Detail Information
Publications
Learning to throw on a rotating carousel: recalibration based on limb dynamics and projectile kinematicsHugo Bruggeman
Department of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences, Brown University, Providence, RI 02912 1978, USA
Exp Brain Res 163:188-97. 2005..These results raised the question of how multiple components of recalibration of an action are related. We propose that movement components are independent and calibrated separately at different levels in the organization of an action...
Optic flow drives human visuo-locomotor adaptationHugo Bruggeman
Department of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island 02912, USA
Curr Biol 17:2035-40. 2007..Optic flow thus plays a central role in both online control of walking and adaptation of the visuo-locomotor mapping...
The direction of walking--but not throwing or kicking--is adapted by optic flowHugo Bruggeman
Department of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences, Brown University, Providence, RI 02912, USA
Psychol Sci 21:1006-13. 2010..These findings are consistent with recalibration of a task-specific visuo-locomotor mapping, revealing a functional level of organization in perception and action...
The processing of linear perspective and binocular information for action and perceptionHugo Bruggeman
Human Sensorimotor Control Laboratory, Department of Psychology, University of Minnesota, USA
Neuropsychologia 45:1420-6. 2007..The finding that under monocular view participants responded to perspective information in both the action and the perception task rules out the attention-based argument...
Biomechanical versus inertial information: stable individual differences in perception of self-rotationHugo Bruggeman
Department of Psychology, University of Minnesota, Minnesota, USA
J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform 35:1472-80. 2009..Just more than half of the participants based their perceived speed of self-rotation on biomechanical information, whereas the others based theirs on inertial information...
