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Progress in Motor Control: A Multidisciplinary Perspective - Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology 2009 edition
Dagmar Sternad
Progress in Motor Control: A Multidisciplinary Perspective - Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology 2009 edition
Dagmar Sternad
This ground-breaking book brings together researchers from a wide range of disciplines to discuss the control and coordination of processes involved in perceptually guided actions.
Marc Notes: Includes bibliographical references and index. Table of Contents: Part I. The Nature of Motor Control -- Nature of Motor Control: Not Strictly Motor, Not Quite Control / Michael T. Turvey -- Beyond Control: The Dynamics of Brain-Body-Environment Interaction in Motor Systems / Randall D. Beer -- Towards Testable Neuromechanical Control Architectures for Running / Shai Revzen, Daniel E. Koditschek, Robert J. Full -- Control from an Allometric Perspective / Bruce J. West -- Synergies: Atoms of Brain and Behavior / J. A. Scott Kelso -- Nature of Motor Control: Perspectives and Issues / Michel T. Turvey, Sergio Fonseca -- Part II. What is Encoded in the Brain? -- Past, Present, and Emerging Principles in the Neural Encoding of Movement / Timothy J. Ebner, Claudia M. Hendrix, Siavash Pasalar -- From Intention to Action: Motor Cortex and the Control of Reaching Movements / John F. Kalaska -- Control of Muscle Synergies by Cortical Ensembles / Michelle M. Morrow, Eric A. Pohlmeyer, Lee E. Miller -- Behavioral and Neurophysiological Aspects of Target Interception / Hugo Merchant, Wilbert Zarco, Luis Prado, Oswaldo Perez -- Learning from Learning: What Can Visuomotor Adaptations Tell us About the Neuronal Representation of Movement? / Rony Paz, Eilon Vaadia -- The Problem of Parametric Neural Coding in the Motor System / Jacob Reimer, Nicholas G. Hatsopoulos -- Part III. Perception and Action -- Introduction to Section on Perception and Action / Brett R. Fajen -- Mutuality in the Perception of Affordances and the Control of Movement / Claudia Carello, Jeffrey B. Wagman -- Object Avoidance During Locomotion / David A. McVea, Keir G. Pearson -- The Roles of Vision and Proprioception in the Planning of Reaching Movements / Fabrice R. Sarlegna, Robert L. Sainburg -- Using Predictive Motor Control Processes in a Cognitive Task: Behavioral and Neuroanatomical Perspectives / James Stanley, R. Christopher Miall -- The Human Mirror Neuron System and Embodied Representations / Lisa Aziz-Zadeh, Richard B. Ivry -- Disorders of the Perceptual-Motor System / Steven A. Jax, H. Branch Coslett -- Part IV. Motor Learning -- Some Contemporary Issues in Motor Learning / Karl M. Newell, Rajiv Ranganathan -- Motor Learning and Consolidation: The Case of Visuomotor Rotation / John W. Krakauer -- Cortical Processing during Dynamic Motor Adaptation / Simon A. Overduin, Andrew G. Richardson, Emilio Bizzi -- Motor Learning: Changes in the Structure of Variability in a Redundant Task / Hermann Muller, Dagmar Sternad -- Time Scales, Difficulty/Skill Duality, and the Dynamics of Motor Learning / Karl M. Newell, Yeou-Teh Liu, Gottfried Mayer-Kress -- Part V. Bridging of Models for Complex Movements in 3D -- Bridging of Models for Complex Movements in 3D / Stan Gielen -- The Posture-Based Motion Planning Framework: New Findings Related to Object Manipulation, Moving Around Obstacles, Moving in Three Spatial Dimensions, and Haptic Tracking / David A. Rosenbaum, Rajal G. Cohen, Amanda M. Dawson, Steven A. Jax, Ruud G. Meulenbroek, Robrecht van der Wel, Jonathan Vaughan -- Grasping Occam's Razor / Jeroen B. J. Smeets, Eli Brenner, Juul Martin -- Review of Models for the Generation of Multi-Joint Movements in 3-D / Stan Gielen -- Part VI. The Hand as a Complex System -- Why the Hand? / Francisco J. Valero-Cuevas -- Selective Activation of Human Finger Muscles after Stroke or Amputation / Marc H. Schieber, C. E. Lang, K. T. Reilly, P. McNulty, A. Sirigu -- Neural Control of Hand Muscles During Prehension / Jamie A. Johnston, Sara A. Winges, Marco Santello -- Multi-Finger Prehension: Control of a Redundant Mechanical System / Mark L. Latash, Vladimir M. Zatsiorsky -- A Mathematical Approach to the Mechanical Capabilities of Limbs and Fingers / Francisco J. Valero-Cuevas -- Part VII. Forty Years of Equilibrium-Point Hypothesis -- Origin and Advances of the Equilibrium-Point Hypothesis / Anatol G. Feldman -- The Biomechanics of Force Production / Denis Rancourt, Neville Hogan -- The Implications of Force Feedback for the [lambda] Model / Richard Nichols, Kyla T. Ross -- Control and Calibration of Multi-Segment Reaching Movements / James R. Lackner, Paul DiZio -- The Equilibrium-Point Hypothesis-Past, Present and Future / Anatol G. Feldman, Mindy F. Levin -- Subject Index. Publisher Marketing: It has become widely acknowledged, and almost trivial to state, that the study of the control and coordination of biological movement motor control is inherently multidisciplinary. From the investigation of overt functional behavior to the int- cacies of neuronal activations, the issues are numerous and invite many different levels of analysis, methods, and perspectives. Clearly, the biological movement system is simultaneously a dynamical, neurophysiological, electrophysiological, and intentional system, in short, a complex system in the technical sense of the word. While multidisciplinarity in motor control research is a necessity, it also presents a stumbling block to developing a coherent body of knowledge that represents the science of the control and coordination of movement. Research thrusts are developing from different academic backgrounds that are not easily understood by peers with entirely different disciplinary training. Not only for the student of motor control, but also for the advanced researcher, it can be daunting to make connections, for example, between cognitive issues like pl- ning or attention and functional properties of the peripheral nervous system, between motor cortical activation and the biomechanics of the multi-joint limb system. Yet, all of these approaches aim to shed light on the same phenomenon the astonishing ability of biological systems to move, perceive, grow, adapt, use tools, and do infinitely more things. For the science of motor control to progress more integration of disciplines is therefore necessary."
Media | Books Hardcover Book (Book with hard spine and cover) |
Released | December 18, 2008 |
ISBN13 | 9780387770635 |
Publishers | Springer-Verlag New York Inc. |
Pages | 734 |
Dimensions | 174 × 241 × 56 mm · 1.34 kg |
Language | English |
Editor | Sternad, Dagmar |
See all of Dagmar Sternad ( e.g. Hardcover Book )