Exact(1)
While those who interpret infant's predictive gaze as support for the mirror neuron theory of action understanding would likely argue that such cues are also lacking in the hand condition, it may be that, by 12 months of age, placing actions are assumed to be goal-directed based on experience of seeing hands acting in goal-directed ways (Biro & Leslie, 2007).
Similar(59)
Even if this is true temporally (a negative r value might indicate this possibility, although it was not statistically significant), it is unclear why this speed/accuracy trade-off pattern appeared among the hand conditions used in this study.
Therefore, it is unlikely to explain the additional sensitivity to outcomes exhibited in the trembling hand condition, from which the "control effect" is inferred.
Behavioral data showed more errors in the uncertain condition compared with the unilateral hand condition (first study) as well as in the incongruent compared with the congruent condition (second study).
We observed a significantly greater proprioceptive drift in the right hand condition, eliciting the bilateral transfer illusion.
The third study (Eickhoff, Pomjanski et al. 2011) was a 2-choice reaction-time task similar to the random hand condition of the first study described above.
The control model explains subjects' additional sensitivity to stingy outcomes in the trembling hand condition, compared to the no control condition.
There are reasons to doubt that this feature of the game is responsible for the dominance of outcomes in the trembling hand condition, however.
On the other hand, condition (1.6) is known as the famous criterium of univalence due to Noshiro [24] and Warschawski [25] (cf. [[23], Vol. I, p.88]).
Second, this "floor" on punishment was consistent across all conditions, and thus cannot explain the substantially different sensitivity to outcomes exhibited in the no control condition compared to the trembling hand condition.
This was done by transposing left and right hemisphere data in the left hand condition to permit averaging with the right hand condition.
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