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Stoffregen co-authors article published in Frontiers in Virtual Reality

1 year 7 months ago
Tom Stoffregen, PhD, professor in the School of Kinesiology and director of the Affordance Perception-Action Laboratory (APAL), along with co-authors in the APAL, Danny Arruda, MS, and George Bailey, MS, a doctoral candidate in the School of Kinesiology, has published an article entitled, "Using quantitative data on postural activity to develop methods to predict and prevent cybersickness" to Frontiers in Virtual Reality.
Jason Hanka

Against free energy, for direct perception

1 year 7 months ago
We question the free energy principle (FEP) as it is used in contemporary physics. If the FEP is incorrect in physics, then it cannot ground the authors' arguments. We also question the assumption that perception requires inference. We argue that perception (including perception of social affordances) can be direct, in which case inference is not required.
Thomas A Stoffregen

Stoffregen quoted by New York Times

1 year 8 months ago
Tom Stoffregen, PhD, professor in the School of Kinesiology and director of the Affordance Perception-Action Laboratory (APAL), was recently interviewed and quoted by the New York Times.
Jason Hanka

KinReflects on Women’s History Month

2 years 1 month ago
To celebrate the end of Women’s History Month, the School of Kinesiology asked a few of our members about how women have positively impacted and empowered their lives.
Simone Asen-Klaskin

Stoffregen Bailey Wu and Rosenberg receive honorable mention for best paper

2 years 6 months ago
Tom Stoffregen, PhD, professor in the School of Kinesiology and director of the Affordance Perception-Action Laboratory (APAL,) George Bailey, a graduate student researcher in APAL, Fei Wu, a doctoral student in computer science at the U of M, and Evan Suma Rosenberg, PhD, an associate professor of computer science at the U of M, received an honorable mention for best paper at the ACM (Association for Computing Machinery) Spatial User Interaction 2021 virtual conference.
Simone Asen-Klaskin

Stoffregen PLOS ONE article research featured on Jeopardy game show!

2 years 6 months ago
Postural sway research by Thomas Stoffregen, Ph.D., professor and director of the Affordance Perception-Action Laboratory (APAL) in the School of Kinesiology, was featured November 2 in the popular television game show Jeopardy! Stoffregen and his colleagues (Fuch-Chen Chen, Manuel Varlet, Christina Alcantara, Benoit Bardy) published the groundbreaking article “Getting your sea legs,” in PLOS ONE […]
Cate Pardo

Stoffregen PLOS ONE article research on Jeopardy! game show?

2 years 9 months ago
Postural sway research by Thomas Stoffregen, Ph.D., professor and director of the Affordance Perception-Action Laboratory (APAL) in the School of Kinesiology, is under consideration for use on the television game show Jeopardy! Stoffregen and his colleagues (Fuch-Chen Chen, Manuel Varlet, Christina Alcantara, Benoit Bardy) published the seminal article “Getting your sea legs,” in PLOS ONE […]
Jonathan Sweet

Thomas Stoffregen elected to Center for Cognitive Sciences Executive Council

2 years 10 months ago
School of Kinesiology professor Thomas Stoffregen, PhD, published an article titled, "Structure of variability in scanning movement predicts braille reading performance in children," in Scientific Reports on March 30, 2021. The study looked at children learning to read braille. Over a period of 12 months, researchers recorded the position and orientation of the reading fingers of eight congenitally or early blind children.
Jonathan Sweet

Control of a virtual vehicle influences postural activity and motion sickness in pre-adolescent children

2 years 10 months ago
Among adults, persons in control of a vehicle (i.e., drivers) are less likely to experience motion sickness compared to persons in the same vehicle who do not control it (i.e., passengers). This "driver-passenger effect" is well-known in adults, but has not been evaluated in children. Using a yoked-control design with seated pre-adolescent children, we exposed dyads to a driving video game. In each dyad, one child (the driver) drove the virtual vehicle. Their performance was recorded, and later...
Chih-Hui Chang

Stoffregen publishes study about quantitative kinematics in relation to learning braille

3 years 1 month ago
School of Kinesiology professor Thomas Stoffregen, PhD, published an article titled, "Structure of variability in scanning movement predicts braille reading performance in children," in Scientific Reports on March 30, 2021. The study looked at children learning to read braille. Over a period of 12 months, researchers recorded the position and orientation of the reading fingers of eight congenitally or early blind children.
Kinesiology