"Dance, dance… otherwise we are lost." This oft-cited phrase by Pina Bausch encapsulates not only the urgency of movement, but its capacity to reveal space itself. In her choreographies, space is ...
1 Department of Old Age Psychiatry, Institute of Psychiatry, King's College London, London, UK 2 Natbrainlab, Department of Forensic and Neurodevelopmental Sciences, Institute of Psychiatry, King's ...
For decades, spatial skills have been associated with success in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM). More recently, these skills have been linked to success in computer science (CS) ...
Motor actions are a key channel for interactions with the world, including other individuals. Although actions are ubiquitous in everyday social life, how their spatial locations are encoded in the ...
Spatial reasoning is ingrained in daily life, such as when locating our keys or parking our car. At a broad level, spatial reasoning describes the ability to mentally represent and transform objects ...
Our peripheral vision is primarily limited by crowding, the disruption to object recognition that arises in clutter. Crowding is widely assumed to be a singular process, affecting all the features ...
Visual perception and imagery rely on similar representations in the visual cortex. During perception, visual activity is characterized by distinct processing stages, but the temporal dynamics ...
What happens to us when it becomes “normal” everyday life to live with high levels of violence? How does it affect our development as individuals, how we raise our children and relate to others in ...
Theories on visual perception agree that scenes are processed in terms of spatial frequencies. Low spatial frequencies (LSF) carry coarse information whereas high spatial frequencies (HSF) carry fine ...