“…Affordances are perceptible, task specific, organism-relative properties of objects and events; not “how large is that object?” but “can the object be grasped by me?” or “can the object be stepped over by me?” (Gibson, 1979; Turvey, Shaw, Reed, & Mace, 1981). Affordances have been studied in a variety of contexts, including locomotion (e.g., Adolph, Eppler, & Gibson, 1993; Fajen, 2007; Snapp-Childs & Bingham, 2009; Warren, 1984; Warren & Whang, 1987), prehension (e.g., Bingham & Muchisky, 1993a, 1993b; Mark et al, 1997; Mon-Williams & Bingham, 2011; Bingham, Snapp-Childs, Fath, Pan, & Coats, 2014), bouncing a ball on a racquet (e.g., Schaal, Atkeson, & Sternad, 1996; Siegler, Bazile & Warren, 2013; Sternad, Duarte, Katsumata, & Schaal, 2001), and interception (e.g., Fink, Foo, & Warren, 2009; Oudejans, Michaels, Bakker, & Dolné, 1996). More recent work has investigated the affordances of objects for maximum distance throwing (Bingham, Schmidt, & Rosenblum, 1989; Zhu & Bingham, 2008, 2010; Zhu, Dapena, & Bingham, 2009; Zhu, Mirich, & Bingham, 2014; Zhu, Shockley, Riley, Tolston, & Bingham, 2013).…”