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This collection of contributions on the subject of the neural
mechanisms of sensorimotor control resulted from a conference held
in Cairns, Australia, September 3-6, 2001. While the three of us
were attending the International Union of Physiological Sciences
(IUPS) Congress in St Petersburg, Russia, in 1997, we discussed the
implications of the next Congress being awarded to New Zealand. We
agreed to organise a satellite to this congress in an area of
mutual interest -the neuroscience of movement and sensation.
Australia has a long-standing and enviable reputation in the field
of neural mechanisms of sensorimotor control. Arguably this reached
its peak with the award of a Nobel Prize to Sir John Eccles in 1963
for his work on synaptic transmission in the central nervous
system. Since that time, the subject of neuroscience has progressed
considerably. One advance is the exploitation of knowledge acquired
from animal experiments to studies on conscious human subjects. In
this development, Australians have achieved international
prominence, particularly in the areas of kinaesthesia and movement
control. This bias is evident in the choice of subject matter for
the conference and, subsequently, this book. It was also decided to
assign a whole section to muscle mechanics, a subject that is often
left out altogether from conferences on motor control. Cairns is a
lovely city and September is a good time to visit it.
This collection of contributions on the subject of the neural
mechanisms of sensorimotor control resulted from a conference held
in Cairns, Australia, September 3-6, 2001. While the three of us
were attending the International Union of Physiological Sciences
(IUPS) Congress in St Petersburg, Russia, in 1997, we discussed the
implications of the next Congress being awarded to New Zealand. We
agreed to organise a satellite to this congress in an area of
mutual interest -the neuroscience of movement and sensation.
Australia has a long-standing and enviable reputation in the field
of neural mechanisms of sensorimotor control. Arguably this reached
its peak with the award of a Nobel Prize to Sir John Eccles in 1963
for his work on synaptic transmission in the central nervous
system. Since that time, the subject of neuroscience has progressed
considerably. One advance is the exploitation of knowledge acquired
from animal experiments to studies on conscious human subjects. In
this development, Australians have achieved international
prominence, particularly in the areas of kinaesthesia and movement
control. This bias is evident in the choice of subject matter for
the conference and, subsequently, this book. It was also decided to
assign a whole section to muscle mechanics, a subject that is often
left out altogether from conferences on motor control. Cairns is a
lovely city and September is a good time to visit it.
Presented with a choice of evils, most would prefer to be blinded
rather than to be unable to move, immobilized in the late stages of
Parkinson's disease. Yet in everyday life, as in Neuroscience,
vision holds the centre of the stage. The conscious psyche watches
a private TV show all day long, while the motor system is left to
get on with it "out of sight and out of mind. " Motor skills are
worshipped at all levels of society, whether in golf, tennis,
soccer, athletics or in musical performance; meanwhile the
subconscious machinery is ignored. But scientifically there is
steady advance on a wide front, as we are reminded here, from the
reversal of the reflexes of the stick insects to the site of motor
learning in the human cerebral cortex. As in the rest of
Physiology, evolution has preserved that which has already worked
well; thus general principles can often be best discerned in lower
animals. No one scientist can be personally involved at all levels
of analysis, but especially for the motor system a narrow view is
doomed from the outset. Interaction is all; the spinal cord has
surrendered its autonomy to the brain, but the brain can only
control the limbs by talking to the spinal cord in a language that
it can understand, determined by its pre-existing circuitry; and
both receive a continuous stream of feedback from the periphery.
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