date: 2017-07-13T07:29:58Z pdf:PDFVersion: 1.6 pdf:docinfo:title: 10-Month-Old Infants Are Sensitive to the Time Course of Perceived Actions: Eye-Tracking and EEG Evidence xmp:CreatorTool: LaTeX with hyperref package access_permission:can_print_degraded: true subject: Research has shown that infants are able to track a moving target efficiently ? even if it is transiently occluded from sight. dc:format: application/pdf; version=1.6 pdf:docinfo:creator_tool: LaTeX with hyperref package access_permission:fill_in_form: true pdf:encrypted: false dc:title: 10-Month-Old Infants Are Sensitive to the Time Course of Perceived Actions: Eye-Tracking and EEG Evidence modified: 2017-07-13T07:29:58Z cp:subject: Research has shown that infants are able to track a moving target efficiently ? even if it is transiently occluded from sight. pdf:docinfo:subject: Research has shown that infants are able to track a moving target efficiently ? even if it is transiently occluded from sight. pdf:docinfo:creator: Cathleen Bache and Markus Werkle-Bergner PTEX.Fullbanner: This is MiKTeX-pdfTeX 2.9.5496 (1.40.15) meta:author: Cathleen Bache and Markus Werkle-Bergner trapped: False meta:creation-date: 2017-07-12T09:55:51Z created: 2017-07-12T09:55:51Z access_permission:extract_for_accessibility: true Creation-Date: 2017-07-12T09:55:51Z Author: Cathleen Bache and Markus Werkle-Bergner producer: pdfTeX-1.40.15 pdf:docinfo:producer: pdfTeX-1.40.15 pdf:unmappedUnicodeCharsPerPage: 0 dc:description: Research has shown that infants are able to track a moving target efficiently ? even if it is transiently occluded from sight. Keywords: EEG, eye-tracking, sensorimotor simulation, action perception, occlusion, memory, real-time access_permission:modify_annotations: true dc:creator: Cathleen Bache and Markus Werkle-Bergner description: Research has shown that infants are able to track a moving target efficiently ? even if it is transiently occluded from sight. dcterms:created: 2017-07-12T09:55:51Z Last-Modified: 2017-07-13T07:29:58Z dcterms:modified: 2017-07-13T07:29:58Z title: 10-Month-Old Infants Are Sensitive to the Time Course of Perceived Actions: Eye-Tracking and EEG Evidence xmpMM:DocumentID: uuid:d826cf40-9f10-46e2-8fcd-3736ee16a4dc Last-Save-Date: 2017-07-13T07:29:58Z pdf:docinfo:keywords: EEG, eye-tracking, sensorimotor simulation, action perception, occlusion, memory, real-time pdf:docinfo:modified: 2017-07-13T07:29:58Z meta:save-date: 2017-07-13T07:29:58Z pdf:docinfo:custom:PTEX.Fullbanner: This is MiKTeX-pdfTeX 2.9.5496 (1.40.15) Content-Type: application/pdf X-Parsed-By: org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser creator: Cathleen Bache and Markus Werkle-Bergner dc:subject: EEG, eye-tracking, sensorimotor simulation, action perception, occlusion, memory, real-time access_permission:assemble_document: true xmpTPg:NPages: 18 pdf:charsPerPage: 3644 access_permission:extract_content: true access_permission:can_print: true pdf:docinfo:trapped: False meta:keyword: EEG, eye-tracking, sensorimotor simulation, action perception, occlusion, memory, real-time access_permission:can_modify: true pdf:docinfo:created: 2017-07-12T09:55:51Z