Daniel Nathan Bub, Ph.D.

Affiliations: 
Psychology  University of Victoria, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada 
Area:
Action representations, language, object recognition
Google:
"Daniel Bub"
Mean distance: 106866
 
Cross-listing: PsychTree

BETA: Related publications

Publications

You can help our author matching system! If you notice any publications incorrectly attributed to this author, please sign in and mark matches as correct or incorrect.

Chua KW, Bub DN, Masson MEJ, et al. (2017) Grasp Representations Depend on Knowledge and Attention. Journal of Experimental Psychology. Learning, Memory, and Cognition
Bub DN, Masson MEJ, Kumar R. (2017) Time Course of Motor Affordances Evoked by Pictured Objects and Words. Journal of Experimental Psychology. Human Perception and Performance
Areshenkoff CN, Bub DN, Masson MEJ. (2017) Task-dependent motor representations evoked by spatial words: Implications for embodied accounts of word meaning Journal of Memory and Language. 92: 158-169
Bub DN, Masson ME, Lin T. (2015) Components of action representations evoked when identifying manipulable objects. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience. 9: 42
Heard AW, Masson ME, Bub DN. (2015) Time course of action representations evoked during sentence comprehension. Acta Psychologica. 156: 98-103
Till BC, Masson ME, Bub DN, et al. (2014) Embodied effects of conceptual knowledge continuously perturb the hand in flight. Psychological Science. 25: 1637-48
Bub DN, Masson ME, Lin T. (2013) Features of planned hand actions influence identification of graspable objects. Psychological Science. 24: 1269-76
Masson ME, Bub DN, Lavelle H. (2013) Dynamic evocation of hand action representations during sentence comprehension. Journal of Experimental Psychology. General. 142: 742-62
Bub DN, Masson ME. (2012) On the dynamics of action representations evoked by names of manipulable objects. Journal of Experimental Psychology. General. 141: 502-17
Bukach CM, Gauthier I, Tarr MJ, et al. (2012) Does acquisition of Greeble expertise in prosopagnosia rule out a domain-general deficit? Neuropsychologia. 50: 289-304
See more...