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Benoît G. Bardy
Researcher at University of Montpellier
Publications - 169
Citations - 5552
Benoît G. Bardy is an academic researcher from University of Montpellier. The author has contributed to research in topics: Motor coordination & Body movement. The author has an hindex of 38, co-authored 160 publications receiving 4967 citations. Previous affiliations of Benoît G. Bardy include Aix-Marseille University & Université Paris-Saclay.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Just the sight of you: postural effects of interpersonal visual contact at sea.
Manuel Varlet,Manuel Varlet,Thomas A. Stoffregen,Fu Chen Chen,Cristina Alcantara,Ludovic Marin,Benoît G. Bardy +6 more
TL;DR: Findings provide the first evidence that the "soft" constraint of interpersonal visual contact can influence interpersonal postural coordination as people simultaneously adjust postural sway in response to powerful mechanical constraints.
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Coupling of postural activity with motion of a ship at sea
TL;DR: Postural activity differed between body axes as a function of body orientation relative to the ship, and coupling differed between participants who had been seasick at the beginning of the voyage and those who had not.
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The role of environmental constraints in walking: Effects of steering and sharp turns on gait dynamics
TL;DR: Mediation analysis showed that the effect of the experimental manipulation in the current experiment depends partly on a reduction in walking speed, which supports the biomechanical theory and suggests that the recovery from the sharp turn perturbation takes longer than the four to seven meters between successive turns in the present study.
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Action and Intermodal Information Influence the Perception of Orientation
Journal ArticleDOI
Nonverbal expressive behaviour in schizophrenia and social phobia
Jonathan Del-Monte,Stéphane Raffard,Robin N. Salesse,Ludovic Marin,Richard Schmidt,Manuel Varlet,Benoît G. Bardy,Jean Philippe Boulenger,Marie-Christine Gély-Nargeot,Delphine Capdevielle +9 more
TL;DR: Schizophrenia patients performed fewer spontaneous gestures whereas social phobia patients had an impaired ability to produce voluntary smiles in comparison to healthy controls, and poor social functioning was significantly correlated with a decrease of expressive behaviour.