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Marc Jeannerod

Researcher at Centre national de la recherche scientifique

Publications -  180
Citations -  34950

Marc Jeannerod is an academic researcher from Centre national de la recherche scientifique. The author has contributed to research in topics: Action (philosophy) & Body movement. The author has an hindex of 81, co-authored 180 publications receiving 33633 citations. Previous affiliations of Marc Jeannerod include French Institute of Health and Medical Research & Claude Bernard University Lyon 1.

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Mental imaging of motor activity in humans.

TL;DR: Motor imagery corresponds to a subliminal activation of the motor system, a system that appears to be involved not only in producing movements, but also in imagining actions, recognising tools and learning by observation, as well as in understanding the behaviour of other people.
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Selective perturbation of visual input during prehension movements. 2. The effects of changing object size.

TL;DR: Comparisons of movement characteristics of the transport and grasp components of these perturbed movements with appropriate control movements suggest that the two visuomotor channels have different time constraints with the time-constant of the channel activated by the perturbation constraining the timing of the other.
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Optimal response of eye and hand motor systems in pointing at a visual target. I. Spatio-temporal characteristics of eye and hand movements and their relationships when varying the amount of visual information.

TL;DR: In a task requiring an optimal hand pointing at a peripheral target, there is first a saccade of the eye within 250 ms, followed 100 ms later by the hand movement, which suggests an early parallel processing of the two motor outputs.
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Looking for the agent: an investigation into consciousness of action and self-consciousness in schizophrenic patients

TL;DR: Hallucinating and deluded schizophrenic patients were more impaired in their own hand from the alien one than the non-hallucinating ones, and tended to misattribute the alien hand to themselves.
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Defective recognition of one's own actions in patients with schizophrenia.

TL;DR: The findings support the hypothesis that delusions of influence are associated with a quantifiable difficulty in correct self-attribution of actions and may be related to a specific impairment of a neural action attribution system.