Publication | Open Access
Object Visibility, Not Energy Expenditure, Accounts For Spatial Biases in Human Grasp Selection
16
Citations
14
References
2019
Year
Dexterous ManipulationEnergy ExpenditureCognitionMotor ControlAttentionHuman GraspingSocial SciencesKinesiologyObject VisibilityPerception SystemHealth SciencesCognitive ScienceBehavioral SciencesHuman Grasp SelectionPerception-action LoopVisual FunctionSpatial BiasesEye TrackingSpatial CognitionObject Manipulation
Humans exhibit spatial biases when grasping objects. These biases may be due to actors attempting to shorten their reaching movements and therefore minimize energy expenditures. An alternative explanation could be that they arise from actors attempting to minimize the portion of a grasped object occluded from view by the hand. We reanalyze data from a recent study, in which a key condition decouples these two competing hypotheses. The analysis reveals that object visibility, not energy expenditure, most likely accounts for spatial biases observed in human grasping.
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