Motor Control

£69.99

Motor Control

Theories, Experiments, and Applications

Neurology and clinical neurophysiology Neurosciences

Authors: Frédéric Danion, Mark Latash

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Language: English

Published by: Oxford University Press

Published on: 16th December 2010

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 16 Mb

ISBN: 9780190453237


Motor control has established itself as an area of scientific research characterized by a multi-disciplinary approach.

Scientists working in the area of control of voluntary movements come from different backgrounds including but not limited to physiology, physics, psychology, mathematics, neurology, physical therapy, computer science, robotics, and engineering. One of the factors slowing progress in the area has been the lack of communication among researchers representing all these disciplines. A major objective of the current book is to overcome this deficiency and to promote cooperation and mutual understanding among researchers addressing different aspects of the complex phenomenon of motor coordination. The book offers a collection of chapters written by the most prominent researchers in the field. Despite the variety of approaches and methods, all the chapters are united by a common goal: To understand how the central nervous system controls and coordinates natural voluntary movements. This book will be appreciated as a major reference by researchers working in all the subfields that form motor control. It can also be used as a supplementary reading book for graduate courses in such fields as kinesiology, physiology, biomechanics, psychology, robotics, and movement disorders.

In one concise volume, Motor Control presents the diversity of the research performed to understand human movement. Deftly organized into 6 primary sections, the editors, Dr Frédéric Danion and Dr Mark Latash, have invited the who’s who of specialists to write on:

  • Motor Control: Control of a Complex
  • Cortical Mechanisms of Motor Control
  • Lessons from Biomechanics
  • Lessons from Motor Learning and Using Tools
  • Lessons from Studies of Aging and Motor Disorders
  • Lessons from Robotics

Motor Control will quickly become the go-to reference for researchers in this growing field. Researchers from mechanics and engineering to psychology and neurophysiology, as well as clinicians working in motor disorders and rehabilitation, will be equally interested in the pages contained herein.

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