“…To understand the biomechanical and cognitive background of manual action in more detail, we established lines of research on the movement primitives of manual action, with the help of biomechanical and cognitive analyses. Because the production of manual actions is affected by such factors as biomechanical constraints (Rosenbaum, Meulenbroek, Vaughan, & Jansen, 2001;Weigelt, Kunde, & Prinz, 2006), we have carried out some developmental studies on the relationship between biomechanical constraints like the end-state-comfort effect and the cognitive representation of grasping postures in children (Stöckel, Hughes, & Schack, 2012). Other studies have explored the link between semantic and motor memory, especially in the case of grasping (Weigelt, Rosenbaum, Hülshorst, & Schack, 2009).…”