Abstract — Two research communities, motor systems neu-roscience and motor prosthetics, examine the relationship between neural activity in the motor cortex and movement. The former community aims to understand how the brain controls and generates movement; the latter community focuses on how to decode neural activity as control signals for a prosthetic cursor or limb. Both have made progress toward understanding the relationship between neural activity in the motor cortex and behavior. However, these findings are tested using animal models in an environment that constrains behavior to simple, limited movements. These experiments show that, in constrained settings, simple reaching motions can be decoded from small populations of spiking neu...
Animals, just like humans, can freely move. They do so for various important reasons, such as findin...
We review the current knowledge about the part that motor cortex plays in the preparation and genera...
A fundamental way in which we interact with the world around us is voluntary movement. The primary m...
Abstract — Two research communities, motor systems neu-roscience and motor prosthetics, examine the ...
Objective: Motor neuroscience and brain-machine interface (BMI) design is based on examining how the...
We are able to make robust movements, like walking and reaching, without a thought. Yet despite our ...
Motor actions constitute the way in which we interact with the world, and are driven by millions of ...
Animals, just like humans, can freely move. They do so for various important reasons, such as findin...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, 2002.I...
Although it is firmly established that the primate motor cortex contributes to intentional behavior,...
When experts are immersed in a task, do their brains prioritize task-related activity? Most efforts ...
The brain evolved to control behavior, and locomotion is among the behaviors most critical to animal...
When experts are immersed in a task, do their brains prioritize task-related activity? Most efforts ...
SummaryBackgroundThe results from recent brain-machine interface (BMI) studies suggest that it may b...
The function of mammalian motor cortex has remained a persistent mystery. There is a long history o...
Animals, just like humans, can freely move. They do so for various important reasons, such as findin...
We review the current knowledge about the part that motor cortex plays in the preparation and genera...
A fundamental way in which we interact with the world around us is voluntary movement. The primary m...
Abstract — Two research communities, motor systems neu-roscience and motor prosthetics, examine the ...
Objective: Motor neuroscience and brain-machine interface (BMI) design is based on examining how the...
We are able to make robust movements, like walking and reaching, without a thought. Yet despite our ...
Motor actions constitute the way in which we interact with the world, and are driven by millions of ...
Animals, just like humans, can freely move. They do so for various important reasons, such as findin...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, 2002.I...
Although it is firmly established that the primate motor cortex contributes to intentional behavior,...
When experts are immersed in a task, do their brains prioritize task-related activity? Most efforts ...
The brain evolved to control behavior, and locomotion is among the behaviors most critical to animal...
When experts are immersed in a task, do their brains prioritize task-related activity? Most efforts ...
SummaryBackgroundThe results from recent brain-machine interface (BMI) studies suggest that it may b...
The function of mammalian motor cortex has remained a persistent mystery. There is a long history o...
Animals, just like humans, can freely move. They do so for various important reasons, such as findin...
We review the current knowledge about the part that motor cortex plays in the preparation and genera...
A fundamental way in which we interact with the world around us is voluntary movement. The primary m...