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The Gunslinger Effect: Why Are Movements Made...
Journal article

The Gunslinger Effect: Why Are Movements Made Faster When Responding to Versus Initiating an Action?

Abstract

The authors replicated and extended results from the gunfight paradigm (A. Welchman, J. Stanley, M. Schomers, R. Miall, & H. Bulthoff, 2010a) in which participants moved faster when reacting to the perceived initiation of an opponent compared to initiating an action themselves. In addition to replicating these movement time effects, the authors found that time to peak velocity, peak velocity, and movement-endpoint dispersions were similarly impacted. The findings are discussed in terms of a triggering mechanism involved in ballistic and internally generated movements.

Authors

La Delfa NJ; Garcia DBL; Cappelletto JAM; McDonald AC; Lyons JL; Lee TD

Journal

Journal of Motor Behavior, Vol. 45, No. 2, pp. 85–90

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Publication Date

March 1, 2013

DOI

10.1080/00222895.2012.746283

ISSN

0022-2895

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