Irene Senna

Irene Senna
Liverpool Hope University · Department of Psychology

PhD

About

33
Publications
7,943
Reads
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583
Citations
Citations since 2017
12 Research Items
353 Citations
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2017201820192020202120222023020406080
2017201820192020202120222023020406080
Introduction
I am currently investigating the development of vision, multisensory integration, and sensory-motor learning in late cataract-treated individuals, after prolonged early-onset visual deprivation
Additional affiliations
August 2016 - April 2022
Ulm University
Position
  • PostDoc Position
October 2013 - July 2016
Bielefeld University
Position
  • PostDoc Position
January 2013 - September 2013
Università degli Studi di Milano-Bicocca
Position
  • PostDoc Position

Publications

Publications (33)
Article
Full-text available
Being able to perform adept goal-directed actions requires predictive, feed-forward control, including a mapping between the visually estimated target locations and the motor commands reaching for them. When the mapping is perturbed, e.g., due to muscle fatigue or optical distortions, we are quickly able to recalibrate the sensorimotor system to up...
Article
Full-text available
Early visual deprivation typically results in spatial impairments in other sensory modalities. It has been suggested that, since vision provides the most accurate spatial information, it is used for calibrating space in the other senses. Here we investigated whether sight restoration after prolonged early onset visual impairment can lead to the dev...
Article
Full-text available
Adult humans make effortless use of multisensory signals and typically integrate them in an optimal fashion.1 This remarkable ability takes many years for normally sighted children to develop.2,3 Would individuals born blind or with extremely low vision still be able to develop multisensory integration later in life when surgically treated for sigh...
Article
Full-text available
Unlike vision, the mechanisms underlying auditory motion perception are poorly understood. Here we describe an auditory motion illusion revealing a novel cue to auditory speed perception: the temporal frequency of amplitude modulation (AM-frequency), typical for rattling sounds. Naturally, corrugated objects sliding across each other generate rattl...
Article
Full-text available
Perception can often be described as a statistically optimal inference process whereby noisy and incomplete sensory evidence is combined with prior knowledge about natural scene statistics. Previous evidence has shown that humans tend to underestimate the speed of unreliable moving visual stimuli. This finding has been interpreted in terms of a Bay...
Preprint
Full-text available
A brief period of monocular deprivation (MD) in adults is known to induce short-term plasticity of the visual system. However, to what extent MD impacts beyond visual processing is unclear. Here, we investigated alterations of visual and audio-visual processing induced by MD measuring neural oscillations. Results revealed that MD modified neural ac...
Preprint
Full-text available
Being able to perform goal-directed actions requires predictive, feed-forward control, including a mapping between the visually estimated target locations and the motor commands reaching for them. When the mapping is perturbed, e.g., due to muscle fatigue or optical distortions, we are quickly able to recalibrate the sensorimotor system to update t...
Article
Full-text available
Successful interaction with objects in the peripersonal space requires that the information relative to current and upcoming positions of our body is continuously monitored and updated with respect to the location of target objects. Voluntary actions, for example, are known to induce an anticipatory remapping of the peri-hand space (PHS, i.e., the...
Article
Full-text available
Feedback is essential for skill acquisition as it helps identifying and correcting performance errors. Nowadays, Virtual Reality can be used as a tool to guide motor learning, and to provide innovative types of augmented feedback that exceed real world opportunities. Concurrent feedback has shown to be especially beneficial for novices. Moreover, w...
Conference Paper
Latency between a user's movement and visual feedback is inevitable in every Virtual Reality application, as signal transmission and processing take time. Unfortunately, a high end-to-end latency impairs perception and motor performance. While it is possible to reduce feedback delay to tens of milliseconds, these delays will never completely vanish...
Article
The development of the ability to recognize the whole human body shape has long been investigated in infants, while less is known about their ability to recognize the shape of single body parts, and in particular their biomechanical constraints. This study aimed to explore whether 9- and 12-month-old infants have knowledge of a hand-grasping moveme...
Article
Full-text available
[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0134549.].
Article
Full-text available
The sense of touch provides fundamental information about the surrounding world, and feedback about our own actions. Although touch is very important during the earliest stages of life, to date no study has investigated infants’ abilities to process visual stimuli implying touch. This study explores the developmental origins of the ability to visua...
Article
Full-text available
Watching self-generated unilateral hand movements reflected in a mirror-oriented along the midsagittal plane-enhances the excitability of the primary motor cortex (M1) ipsilateral to the moving hand of the observer. Mechanisms detecting sensory-motor conflicts generated by the mirror reflection of such movements might mediate this effect; if so, co...
Article
The development of human body perception has long been investigated, but little is known about its early origins. This study focused on how a body part highly relevant to the human species, namely the hand, is perceived a few days after birth. Using a preferential-looking paradigm, 24- to 48-hr-old newborns watched biomechanically possible and impo...
Article
Action observation typically induces an online inner simulation of the observed movements. Here we investigate whether action observation merely activates, in the observer, the muscles involved in the observed movement or also muscles that are typically used to achieve the observed action goal. In a first experiment, hand and foot motor areas were...
Article
Full-text available
Our body is made of flesh and bones. We know it, and in our daily lives all the senses constantly provide converging information about this simple, factual truth. But is this always the case? Here we report a surprising bodily illusion demonstrating that humans rapidly update their assumptions about the material qualities of their body, based on th...
Article
In primates and adult humans direct understanding of others' action is provided by mirror mechanisms matching action observation and action execution (e.g. Casile, Caggiano & Ferrari, 2011). Despite the growing body of evidence detailing the existence of these mechanisms in the adult human brain, their origins and early development are largely unkn...
Article
Full-text available
The study explores infants’ ability to generate on-line predictions about others’ action goals through the recruitment of motor resonance mechanisms. To this aim, electromyography was recorded from mouth-opening suprahyoid muscles (SM) of 9-month-old infants while watching a video of an adult agent reaching-to-grasp an object and bringing it either...
Article
Full-text available
Our body is made of flesh and bones. We know it, and in our daily lives all the senses — including touch, vision, and audition — constantly provide converging information about this simple, factual truth. But is this necessarily always the case? Here we report a surprising bodily illusion demonstrating that human observers rapidly update their assu...
Article
Human adults possess neurophysiological mechanisms which allow to integrate action perception and execution within the observer's own motor representation. The aim of this study is to examine whether these mechanisms are already present at birth. Using a preferential looking paradigm, Experiment 1 investigated whether newborns are able to discrimin...
Article
Full-text available
Adaptation to prisms displacing the visual scene rightward is a therapeutic tool for left unilateral spatial neglect (USN). We aimed at comparing the effects of the classic adaptation procedure (repeated pointing toward visual targets, control treatment, C), with those of a novel adaptation method, involving ecological visuomotor activities (experi...
Article
Multisensory integration of information from different sensory modalities is an essential component of perception. Neurophysiological studies have revealed that audiovisual interactions occur early in time and even within sensory cortical areas believed to be modality-specific. Here we investigated the effect of auditory stimuli on visual perceptio...

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