• Order to parcel locker

    Order to parcel locker
  • easy pay

    easy pay
  • Reduced price
Motor Control

Motor Control

Theories, Experiments, and Applications

9780195395273
Print on demand. This item has an extended shipping time. The typical delivery time is 4-8 weeks.
859.95 zł
773.95 zł Save 86.00 zł Tax included
Lowest price within 30 days before promotion: 773.95 zł
Quantity
Teaser

  Delivery policy

Choose Paczkomat Inpost, Orlen Paczka, DPD or Poczta Polska. Click for more details

  Security policy

Pay with a quick bank transfer, payment card or cash on delivery. Click for more details

  Return policy

If you are a consumer, you can return the goods within 14 days. Click for more details

Description
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 allthese disciplines. A major objective of the curreent 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 mostprominent 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 Frederic Danion and Dr Mark Latash, have invited the whos who of specialists to write on:: MotorControl:: 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 MotorDisorders; and Lessons from RoboticsMotor 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.
Product Details
OUP USA
86487
9780195395273
9780195395273

Data sheet

Publication date
2011
Issue number
1
Cover
hard cover
Pages count
536
Dimensions (mm)
166 x 241
Weight (g)
885
  • Contributors; Section 1: Motor Control: Control of a Complex System; Chapter 1: Anticipatory Control of Voluntary Action: Merging the Ideas of Equilibrium-point Control and Synergic Control; Mark L. Latash; Chapter 2: Object Representations Used in Action and Perception; J. Randall Flanagan and Roland S. Johansson; Chapter 3: A Canonical-dissipative Approach to Control and Coordination in the Complex System Agent-Task-Environment; Till D. Frank, Dobromir G. Dotov, and Michael T. Turvey; Chapter 4: Observer-independent Dynamical Measures of Team Coordination and Performance; Silke M. Dodel, Ajay S. Pillai, Philip W. Fink, Eric R. Muth, Roy Stripling, Dylan D. Schmorrow, Jeffrey V. Cohn, and Viktor K. Jirsa; Chapter 5: Decomposing Muscle Activity in Motor Tasks: Methods and Interpretation; Lena H. Ting and Stacie A. Chvatal; Section 2: Cortical Mechanisms of Motor Control; Chapter 6: Dynamics of Motor Cortical Networks: the Complementarity of Spike Syndrome and Firing Rate; Alexa Riehle, Sebastian Roux, Bj?rg Elisabeth Kilavik, and Sonja Grün; Chapter 7: Proximal-to-distal Sequencing Behavior and Motor Cortex; Nicholas G. Hatsopoulos, Leonel Olmedo, and Kazutaka Takahashi; Section 3: Lessons from Biomechanics; Chapter 8: The Biomechanics of Movement Control; Walter Herzog; Chapter 9: Control of Locomotion: Lessons from Whole-body Biomechanical Analysis; Boris I. Prilutsky and Alexander N. Klishko; Chapter 10: Control of Equilibrium in Humans: Sway over Sway; Marcos Duarte, Sandra M.S.F. Freitas, and Vladimir Zatsiorsky; Section 4: Lessons from Motor Learning and Using Tools; Chapter 11: Learning and Switching of Internal Models for Dexterous Tool Use; Hiroshi Imamizu; Chapter 12: Variability, Noise, and Sensitivity to Error in Learning a Motor Task; Dagmar Sternad and Masaki O. Abe; Chapter 13: Forecasting the Long-range Consequences of Manual and Tool Use Actions: Neurophysiological, Behavioral, and Computational Considerations; Scott H. Frey; Chapter 14: Training Skills with Virtual Environments; Carlo A. Avizzano, Emanuele Ruffaldi, and Massimo Bergamasco; Section 5: Lessons from Studies of Aging and Motor Disorders; Chapter 15: Brain and Behavior Deficits in De Novo Parkinsons Disease; David E. Vaillancourt and Janey Prodoehl; Chapter 16: Emerging Principles in the Learning and Generalization of New Walking Patterns; Erin V. L. Vasudevan, Amy J. Bastian, and Gelsy Torres-Oviedo; Chapter 17: Aging and Movement Control: The Neural Basis of Age-related Compensatory Recruitment; Stephan P. Swinnen, Sofie Heuninckx, Annouchka Van Impe, Daniel J. Goble, James P. Coxon, and Nicole Wenderoth; Section 6: Lessons from Robotics; Chapter 18: Decoding the Mechanisms of Gait Generation and Gait Transition in the Salamander Using Robots and Mathematical Models; Jeremie Knuesel, Jean-Marie Cabelguen, and Auke Ijspeert; Chapter 19: Aerial Navigation and Optic Flow Sensing: A Biorobotic Approach; Nicolas Franceschini, Frank Ruffier, and Julien Serres; Chapter 20: Models and Architectures for Motor Control: Simple or Complex?; Emmanuel Guigon; Index;
Comments (0)