Jove
Visualize
Contact Us

Related Concept Videos

Metacognition01:26

Metacognition

169
Metacognition is a conscious process where individuals are aware of their cognitive and executive processes, such as planning before solving a problem or self-monitoring during reading. For instance, a writer may need help with composing a piece. The situation involves a writer who is working on a piece of writing, but while doing so, they realize that something is missing. They notice that their characters lack depth or details. This realization occurs because the writer is reflecting on their...
169
Cognitivism01:17

Cognitivism

1.4K
Cognitive psychology emerged as a significant field in the mid-20th century. It focused on understanding humans' internal mental processes. This approach emphasizes how people perceive, remember, think, and solve problems—elements critical to human cognition.
Previously dominated by behaviorism, which prioritized observable behaviors and largely ignored mental processes, psychology transformed in the 1950s. Cognitive psychologists argue that understanding how we think and process...
1.4K
Epistasis Analysis01:09

Epistasis Analysis

5.0K
Although Mendel chose seven unrelated traits in peas to study gene segregation, most traits involve multiple gene interactions that create a spectrum of phenotypes. When the interaction of various genes or alleles at different locations influences a phenotype, this is called epistasis. Epistasis often involves one gene masking or interfering with the expression of another (antagonistic epistasis). Epistasis often occurs when different genes are part of the same biochemical pathway. The...
5.0K
Extrasensory Perception01:23

Extrasensory Perception

241
Extrasensory perception, or ESP, suggests the ability to perceive events beyond the conventional senses of sight, hearing, and touch. Parapsychologists, who research ESP and related psychic phenomena, categorize ESP into three main types: precognition, telepathy, and clairvoyance.
Precognition involves foreseeing future events, such as predicting an accident before it happens. An example of precognition could be someone dreaming about a specific event, like a car crash, which then occurs...
241
Epistasis01:39

Epistasis

46.9K
In addition to multiple alleles at the same locus influencing traits, numerous genes or alleles at different locations may interact and influence phenotypes in a phenomenon called epistasis. For example, rabbit fur can be black or brown depending on whether the animal is homozygous dominant or heterozygous at a TYRP1 locus. However, if the rabbit is also homozygous recessive at a locus on the tyrosinase gene (TYR), it will have an unshaded coat that appears white, regardless of its TYRP1...
46.9K
Factors Affecting Perception01:25

Factors Affecting Perception

1.6K
Perception is influenced by perceptual set, context, motivation, and emotion. Perceptual set, or perceptual expectancy, refers to the tendency to perceive things in a particular way, influenced by previous experiences and expectations. This phenomenon affects the interpretation of stimuli, creating a set of mental tendencies and assumptions that impact sensory perceptions of sound, taste, touch, and sight.
An illustrative example of a perceptual set is the scenario where an airline pilot told...
1.6K

You might also read

Related Articles

Articles linked to this work by shared authors, journal, and citation graph.

Sort by
Same author

Pretending Not to Know Reveals a Capacity for Model-Based Self-Simulation.

Psychological science·2026
Same author

Part-whole effects in visual number estimation.

Attention, perception & psychophysics·2026
Same author

"Core Perception": Re-imagining Precocious Reasoning as Sophisticated Perceiving.

The Behavioral and brain sciences·2025
Same author

Event-based warping: A relative distortion of time within events.

Journal of experimental psychology. General·2025
Same author

The psychophysics of style.

Nature human behaviour·2025
Same author

Is visual perception WEIRD? The Müller-Lyer illusion and the cultural byproduct hypothesis.

Psychological review·2025
JoVE
x logofacebook logolinkedin logoyoutube logo
ABOUT JoVE
OverviewLeadershipBlogJoVE Help Center
AUTHORS
Publishing ProcessEditorial BoardScope & PoliciesPeer ReviewFAQSubmit
LIBRARIANS
TestimonialsSubscriptionsAccessResourcesLibrary Advisory BoardFAQ
RESEARCH
JoVE JournalMethods CollectionsJoVE Encyclopedia of ExperimentsArchive
EDUCATION
JoVE CoreJoVE BusinessJoVE Science EducationJoVE Lab ManualFaculty Resource CenterFaculty Site
Terms & Conditions of Use
Privacy Policy
Policies

Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jul 10, 2025

Author Spotlight: A Novel Setup to Conduct Naturalistic Laboratory Experiments with Real Human Actors in Scenarios
07:43

Author Spotlight: A Novel Setup to Conduct Naturalistic Laboratory Experiments with Real Human Actors in Scenarios

Published on: August 4, 2023

2.0K

Seeing and understanding epistemic actions.

Sholei Croom1, Hanbei Zhou1, Chaz Firestone1

  • 1Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD 21218.

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
|November 20, 2023
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

People can understand what others are trying to learn just by watching their physical actions. This study shows observers can infer epistemic intent from movements, revealing insights into action understanding.

Keywords:
action recognitionintuitive physicssocial perceptiontheory of mind

More Related Videos

Methods to Explore the Influence of Top-down Visual Processes on Motor Behavior
09:49

Methods to Explore the Influence of Top-down Visual Processes on Motor Behavior

Published on: April 16, 2014

25.5K
Eye Tracking During Visually Situated Language Comprehension: Flexibility and Limitations in Uncovering Visual Context Effects
07:36

Eye Tracking During Visually Situated Language Comprehension: Flexibility and Limitations in Uncovering Visual Context Effects

Published on: November 30, 2018

15.7K

Related Experiment Videos

Last Updated: Jul 10, 2025

Author Spotlight: A Novel Setup to Conduct Naturalistic Laboratory Experiments with Real Human Actors in Scenarios
07:43

Author Spotlight: A Novel Setup to Conduct Naturalistic Laboratory Experiments with Real Human Actors in Scenarios

Published on: August 4, 2023

2.0K
Methods to Explore the Influence of Top-down Visual Processes on Motor Behavior
09:49

Methods to Explore the Influence of Top-down Visual Processes on Motor Behavior

Published on: April 16, 2014

25.5K
Eye Tracking During Visually Situated Language Comprehension: Flexibility and Limitations in Uncovering Visual Context Effects
07:36

Eye Tracking During Visually Situated Language Comprehension: Flexibility and Limitations in Uncovering Visual Context Effects

Published on: November 30, 2018

15.7K

Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Science
  • Psychology
  • Human Behavior

Background:

  • Action understanding typically focuses on instrumental actions with physical outcomes.
  • Epistemic actions, performed to gain information, have received less research attention.
  • The ability to infer learning goals from observed movements is largely unexplored.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate whether observers can infer epistemic aims from physical actions.
  • To explore the concept of epistemic action understanding.
  • To determine if movement patterns reveal an actor's learning objective.

Main Methods:

  • Volunteers performed actions (shaking a box) to learn either the number or shape of hidden objects.
  • Videos of these actions were presented to independent observers.
  • Observers were tasked with identifying the learning goal (number vs. shape) based solely on the observed movements.

Main Results:

  • Observers successfully distinguished between actions aimed at learning number versus shape.
  • This accurate inference occurred even when the physical context (box contents) was identical.
  • Performance indicated a robust ability to infer epistemic intent from physical behavior.

Conclusions:

  • Humans can infer epistemic intent from observed physical actions.
  • This finding expands the scope of action understanding research.
  • Observing movement provides cues to an actor's information-seeking goals.