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The 19th century pioneers of motor physiology - Helmholtz, Hering,
Fick and others - used the mathematics of motion, known as
kinematics, to describe the laws of human movement and to deduce
the neural control principles underlying these laws. After long
neglect - partly due to limitations in stimulation and recording
techniques - the kinematic approach is now resurging, fortified
with modern computers and electrophysiology. New developments in
recording techniques, as well as an improved understanding of the
complex control properties of three-dimensional movements, have led
to a flood of new research in this area. The classical laws of
Donders and Listing have been confirmed and generalized, and
computer simulations of the neural control of three-dimensional
movement have been developed and tested.
In this book, some of the world's leading scientists of motor
control discuss how the brain represents and tranforms the
kinematic variables of movement. Background chapters explain the
basic concepts - non-commutativity, redundancy and the classical
laws - and their application to normal function and motor
disorders, and shorter articles describe current research. The
contributions are based on presentations at a symposium held in
Tubingen in August 1995. The wide scope of the book should enable
researchers to gain an overview of current research, but should
also help newcomers tot he field to get a good understanding of the
questions and problems involved in three-dimensional movement
control.
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