Umberto Castiello researcher
Castiello, Umberto, 1959-....
Castiello, Umberto
VIAF ID: 113634023 (Personal)
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/113634023
Preferred Forms
- 200 _ | ‡a Castiello ‡b Umberto ‡f 1959-....
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Castiello, Umberto (sparse)
- 100 1 _ ‡a Castiello, Umberto ‡d 1959-
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- 100 1 0 ‡a Castiello, Umberto, ‡d 1959-
- 100 1 _ ‡a Castiello, Umberto, ‡d 1959-....
- 100 0 _ ‡a Umberto Castiello ‡c researcher
4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (3)
Works
Title | Sources |
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Effects of Olfactory Stimuli on Arm-Reaching Duration | |
Evidence of early development of action planning in the human foetus: a kinematic study. | |
Exploring manual asymmetries during grasping: a dynamic causal modeling approach | |
Facilitation of action planning in children with autism: the contribution of the maternal body odor | |
Failure to read motor intentions from gaze in children with autism. | |
From simulation to reciprocity: the case of complementary actions. | |
Generalized representation of handwriting: evidence of effector independence. | |
Goal or movement? Action representation within the primary motor cortex | |
Grasping a fruit. Hands do what flavour says | |
Grasping intentions: from thought experiments to empirical evidence | |
The grasping side of odours | |
Handedness and White Matter Networks | |
How objects are grasped: the interplay between affordances and end-goals | |
How the gaze of others influences object processing. | |
How to accurately detect autobiographical events. | |
The human premotor cortex is 'mirror' only for biological actions. | |
The human temporal lobe integrates facial form and motion: evidence from fMRI and ERP studies. | |
Implicit olfactory abilities in traumatic brain injured patients. | |
Implicit olfactory processing attenuates motor disturbances in idiopathic Parkinson's disease | |
Implicit processing of shadows | |
The impulsive brain: Neural underpinnings of binge eating behavior in normal-weight adults | |
Insights into the reach to grasp movement, 1994: | |
Intersegmental Coordination in the Kinematics of Prehension Movements of Macaques | |
Investigation of the neural correlates underlying action observation in multiple sclerosis patients. | |
The kinematic signature of voluntary actions. | |
A kinematic study on (un)intentional imitation in bottlenose dolphins | |
The left side of motor resonance | |
Mirror neurons in humans: consisting or confounding evidence? | |
Modulation of reach-to-grasp parameters: semantic category, volumetric properties and distractor interference? | |
Modulation of the action control system by social intention: unexpected social requests override preplanned action. | |
Monkey see, monkey reach: action selection of reaching movements in the macaque monkey. | |
Motor contagion from gaze: the case of autism. | |
Motor cortex excitability is tightly coupled to observed movements | |
Motor facilitation following action observation: a behavioural study in prehensile action | |
Motor interference in interactive contexts | |
Motor ontology in representing gaze-object relations | |
The multiform motor cortical output: Kinematic, predictive and response coding. | |
The neural basis of selection-for-action. | |
Neurofunctional Modulation of Brain Regions by the Observation of Pointing and Grasping Actions | |
The neuroscience of grasping | |
An object-centred reference frame for control of grasping: effects of grasping a distractor object on visuomotor control | |
An object for an action, the same object for other actions: effects on hand shaping | |
Object presence modulates activity within the somatosensory component of the action observation network. | |
Object size modulates fronto-parietal activity during reaching movements | |
Observing social interactions: the effect of gaze. | |
Odours Grab His Hand but Not Hers | |
Perceiving an entire object and grasping only half of it. | |
Potential for social involvement modulates activity within the mirror and the mentalizing systems | |
Processing efficiency of the orienting and the focusing of covert attention in relation to the level of disability in Parkinson's disease. | |
The reach-to-grasp movement in children with autism spectrum disorder | |
The reach-to-grasp movement in Parkinson's disease: response to a simultaneous perturbation of object position and object size | |
Reaching and grasping behavior in Macaca fascicularis: a kinematic study. | |
Reaching in children with and without developmental coordination disorder under normal and perturbed vision. | |
Recovering Space in Unilateral Neglect: A Neurological Dissociation Revealed by Virtual Reality | |
Robotic movement elicits visuomotor priming in children with autism. | |
Selecting food. The contribution of memory, liking, and action. | |
Selective reaching in macaques: evidence for action-centred attention. | |
Shadows in the mirror. | |
The Simon effect in action: planning and/or on-line control effects? | |
Social grasping: from mirroring to mentalizing. | |
Splitting focal attention | |
Subliminally perceived odours modulate female intrasexual competition: an eye movement study | |
Sudden and gradual presentation of distractor objects: differential interference effects. | |
Temporal coupling between transport and grasp components during prehension movements: effects of visual perturbation. | |
Temporal dissociation of the prehension pattern in Parkinson's disease | |
Toward You | |
Transfer of interfered motor patterns to self from others. | |
The transfer of motor functional strategies via action observation | |
Understanding other people's actions: intention and attention. | |
Visual features of an observed agent do not modulate human brain activity during action observation. | |
Visuo-olfactory integration during action observation and execution of reach-to-grasp movements | |
Visuomotor resonance in autism spectrum disorders | |
When Ears Drive Hands: The Influence of Contact Sound on Reaching to Grasp | |
When emulation becomes reciprocity | |
When flavor guides motor control: an effector independence study | |
When gaze turns into grasp. | |
When mirroring is not enough: that is, when only a complementary action will do (the trick). | |
Wired to be social: the ontogeny of human interaction |