The World at Our Fingertips
A Multidisciplinary Exploration of Peripersonal Space
Herausgeber: de Vignemont, Frédérique de Vignemont; Farnè, Alessandro; Wong, Hong Yu; Serino, Andrea
The World at Our Fingertips
A Multidisciplinary Exploration of Peripersonal Space
Herausgeber: de Vignemont, Frédérique de Vignemont; Farnè, Alessandro; Wong, Hong Yu; Serino, Andrea
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Research into peripersonal space has yielded exciting discoveries across many fields, from anthropology to cognitive neuroscience. Bringing these perspectives together for the first time, The World at Our Fingertips presents a fresh, accessible dialogue, challenging entrenched ideas about the way people see and understand the world around them.
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Research into peripersonal space has yielded exciting discoveries across many fields, from anthropology to cognitive neuroscience. Bringing these perspectives together for the first time, The World at Our Fingertips presents a fresh, accessible dialogue, challenging entrenched ideas about the way people see and understand the world around them.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 352
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Juni 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 250mm x 178mm x 24mm
- Gewicht: 830g
- ISBN-13: 9780198851738
- ISBN-10: 0198851731
- Artikelnr.: 59765130
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 352
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Juni 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 250mm x 178mm x 24mm
- Gewicht: 830g
- ISBN-13: 9780198851738
- ISBN-10: 0198851731
- Artikelnr.: 59765130
Dr Frédérique de Vignemont is a CNRS senior researcher in philosophy in Paris. She is the deputy director of the Jean Nicod Institute as well as a philosophy scholar in residence at NYU Paris. She is also one of the executive editors of the Review of Philosophy and Psychology. Her research exists at the intersection of philosophy of mind and cognitive science. Upon completing her PhD, she was the recipient of a Fulbright Fellowship to work at NYU, and in 2015 she was awarded the Young Ming & Brain Prize for her achievements in advancing our knowledge of the mind and the brain. She has been published widely in philosophy and psychology journals, and is the author of Mind the Body: An Exploration of Bodily Self-Awareness with Oxford University Press in 2018. Professor Andrea Serino is SNSF Professor at the University Hospital of Laussane, Head of Neuroscience at MindMaze, and Invited Professor at the Center for Neuroprosthetics at the EPFL. He completed his PhD in Neuropsychology at the University of Bologna, where he was assistant professor from 2006-2012. His main research focus is understanding the neural and cognitive basis of the body and self-experience in space. He has been widely published in international peer-reviewed journals, such as Neuron, Stroke, and Brain. In 2006, he was awarded the De Renzi Prize by the Italian Society of Neuropsychology, and in 2016 he was the recipient of the Leenards Prize for translational research. Professor Hong Yu Wong is Chair of Philosophy of Mind and Cognitive Science at the Philosophisches Seminar and Head of the Philosophy of Neuroscience (PONS) Research Group at the Werner Reichardt Centre for Integrative Neuroscience, University of Tübingen. He is also a faculty member of the Max Planck Neural and Behavioural Graduate School and the Tübingen Cognitive Science Programme. His primary research interests concern the relations between perception and action, and the role of the body in structuring these relations. His honours include a Templeton Foundation ACT Fellowship (2017-2020), the Annual Essay Prize for work on multimodality from the Centre for Philosophical Psychology, University of Antwerp (2012), and the European Science Foundation's CNCC Essay Award for interdisciplinary work on consciousness (2008). Dr Alessandro Farnè is INSERM senior researcher with the ImpAct team at the Lyon Neuroscience Research Centre.
* Peripersonal space: A special way of representing space
* Part I : Perception, Prediction and Action
* 1: Jean-Paul Noël, Tommaso Bertoni, and Andrea Serino: Peri-Personal
Space as an Interface for Self-Environment Interaction; A Critical
Evaluation and Look Ahead
* 2: Elvio Blini, Alessandro Farnè, Claudio Brozzoli, and Fadila
Hadj-Bouziane: Close is better: visual perception in peripersonal
space
* 3: Justine Cléry and Suliann Ben Hamed: Functional networks for
peripersonal space coding and prediction of impact to the body
* 4: H.C. Dijkerman and W.P. Medendorp: Visuotactile predictive
mechanisms of peripersonal space
* 5: Catherine L. Reed and George D. Park: Functional Actions of Hands
and Tools Influence Attention in Peripersonal Space
* 6: Wayne Wu: Dissecting the Experience of Space as Peripersonal
* Part II : Space and Maps
* 7: Colin Klein: Do we represent peripersonal space?
* 8: RJ Bufacchi and GD Iannetti: What do "PPS measures" really
reflect?
* 9: Frédérique de Vignemont: Feeling the world as being here
* 10: Mohan Matthen: The dual structure of touch: the body vs
peripersonal space
* 11: Alisa Mandrigin and Matthew Nudds: Sameness of Place, and the
Senses
* 12: Adrian Alsmith: The structure of egocentric space
* III: The Space of Self and Others
* 13: Matthew Fulkerson: Peripersonal Space, Bodily Self-Awareness, and
the Integrated Self
* 14: Yann Coello and Tina Iachini: The social dimension of
peripersonal space
* 15: Michela Candini, Giuseppe di Pellegrino, and Francesca
Frassinetti: Action and social spaces in typical development and in
Autism Spectrum Disorder
* 16: Anders Pape Møller: Risk-taking behavior as a central concept in
evolutionary biology
* 17: Michael Graziano: Human Emotional Expression and the Peripersonal
Margin of Safety
* Part I : Perception, Prediction and Action
* 1: Jean-Paul Noël, Tommaso Bertoni, and Andrea Serino: Peri-Personal
Space as an Interface for Self-Environment Interaction; A Critical
Evaluation and Look Ahead
* 2: Elvio Blini, Alessandro Farnè, Claudio Brozzoli, and Fadila
Hadj-Bouziane: Close is better: visual perception in peripersonal
space
* 3: Justine Cléry and Suliann Ben Hamed: Functional networks for
peripersonal space coding and prediction of impact to the body
* 4: H.C. Dijkerman and W.P. Medendorp: Visuotactile predictive
mechanisms of peripersonal space
* 5: Catherine L. Reed and George D. Park: Functional Actions of Hands
and Tools Influence Attention in Peripersonal Space
* 6: Wayne Wu: Dissecting the Experience of Space as Peripersonal
* Part II : Space and Maps
* 7: Colin Klein: Do we represent peripersonal space?
* 8: RJ Bufacchi and GD Iannetti: What do "PPS measures" really
reflect?
* 9: Frédérique de Vignemont: Feeling the world as being here
* 10: Mohan Matthen: The dual structure of touch: the body vs
peripersonal space
* 11: Alisa Mandrigin and Matthew Nudds: Sameness of Place, and the
Senses
* 12: Adrian Alsmith: The structure of egocentric space
* III: The Space of Self and Others
* 13: Matthew Fulkerson: Peripersonal Space, Bodily Self-Awareness, and
the Integrated Self
* 14: Yann Coello and Tina Iachini: The social dimension of
peripersonal space
* 15: Michela Candini, Giuseppe di Pellegrino, and Francesca
Frassinetti: Action and social spaces in typical development and in
Autism Spectrum Disorder
* 16: Anders Pape Møller: Risk-taking behavior as a central concept in
evolutionary biology
* 17: Michael Graziano: Human Emotional Expression and the Peripersonal
Margin of Safety
* Peripersonal space: A special way of representing space
* Part I : Perception, Prediction and Action
* 1: Jean-Paul Noël, Tommaso Bertoni, and Andrea Serino: Peri-Personal
Space as an Interface for Self-Environment Interaction; A Critical
Evaluation and Look Ahead
* 2: Elvio Blini, Alessandro Farnè, Claudio Brozzoli, and Fadila
Hadj-Bouziane: Close is better: visual perception in peripersonal
space
* 3: Justine Cléry and Suliann Ben Hamed: Functional networks for
peripersonal space coding and prediction of impact to the body
* 4: H.C. Dijkerman and W.P. Medendorp: Visuotactile predictive
mechanisms of peripersonal space
* 5: Catherine L. Reed and George D. Park: Functional Actions of Hands
and Tools Influence Attention in Peripersonal Space
* 6: Wayne Wu: Dissecting the Experience of Space as Peripersonal
* Part II : Space and Maps
* 7: Colin Klein: Do we represent peripersonal space?
* 8: RJ Bufacchi and GD Iannetti: What do "PPS measures" really
reflect?
* 9: Frédérique de Vignemont: Feeling the world as being here
* 10: Mohan Matthen: The dual structure of touch: the body vs
peripersonal space
* 11: Alisa Mandrigin and Matthew Nudds: Sameness of Place, and the
Senses
* 12: Adrian Alsmith: The structure of egocentric space
* III: The Space of Self and Others
* 13: Matthew Fulkerson: Peripersonal Space, Bodily Self-Awareness, and
the Integrated Self
* 14: Yann Coello and Tina Iachini: The social dimension of
peripersonal space
* 15: Michela Candini, Giuseppe di Pellegrino, and Francesca
Frassinetti: Action and social spaces in typical development and in
Autism Spectrum Disorder
* 16: Anders Pape Møller: Risk-taking behavior as a central concept in
evolutionary biology
* 17: Michael Graziano: Human Emotional Expression and the Peripersonal
Margin of Safety
* Part I : Perception, Prediction and Action
* 1: Jean-Paul Noël, Tommaso Bertoni, and Andrea Serino: Peri-Personal
Space as an Interface for Self-Environment Interaction; A Critical
Evaluation and Look Ahead
* 2: Elvio Blini, Alessandro Farnè, Claudio Brozzoli, and Fadila
Hadj-Bouziane: Close is better: visual perception in peripersonal
space
* 3: Justine Cléry and Suliann Ben Hamed: Functional networks for
peripersonal space coding and prediction of impact to the body
* 4: H.C. Dijkerman and W.P. Medendorp: Visuotactile predictive
mechanisms of peripersonal space
* 5: Catherine L. Reed and George D. Park: Functional Actions of Hands
and Tools Influence Attention in Peripersonal Space
* 6: Wayne Wu: Dissecting the Experience of Space as Peripersonal
* Part II : Space and Maps
* 7: Colin Klein: Do we represent peripersonal space?
* 8: RJ Bufacchi and GD Iannetti: What do "PPS measures" really
reflect?
* 9: Frédérique de Vignemont: Feeling the world as being here
* 10: Mohan Matthen: The dual structure of touch: the body vs
peripersonal space
* 11: Alisa Mandrigin and Matthew Nudds: Sameness of Place, and the
Senses
* 12: Adrian Alsmith: The structure of egocentric space
* III: The Space of Self and Others
* 13: Matthew Fulkerson: Peripersonal Space, Bodily Self-Awareness, and
the Integrated Self
* 14: Yann Coello and Tina Iachini: The social dimension of
peripersonal space
* 15: Michela Candini, Giuseppe di Pellegrino, and Francesca
Frassinetti: Action and social spaces in typical development and in
Autism Spectrum Disorder
* 16: Anders Pape Møller: Risk-taking behavior as a central concept in
evolutionary biology
* 17: Michael Graziano: Human Emotional Expression and the Peripersonal
Margin of Safety