How the CNS masters the many degrees of freedom of the musculoskeletal system to control goal-directed movements is a long-standing question. We have recently provided support to the hypothesis that the CNS relies on a modular control architecture by showing that the phasic muscle patterns for fast reaching movements in different directions are generated by combinations of a few time-varying muscle synergies: coordinated recruitment of groups of muscles with specific activation profiles. However, natural reaching movements occur at different speeds and require the control of both movement and posture. Thus we have investigated whether muscle synergies also underlie reaching at different speeds as well as the maintenance of stable arm postur...
Contains fulltext : 151625.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)The human movem...
Moving the arm is complicated by mechanical interactions that arise between limb segments. Such inte...
Abstract—Motor synergies have been investigated since the 1980s as a simplifying paradigm of motor c...
How the CNS masters the many degrees of freedom of the musculoskeletal system to control goal-direct...
How the CNS selects the appropriate muscle patterns to achieve a behavioral goal is an open question...
Controlling the movement of the arm to achieve a goal, such as reaching for an object, is challengin...
We describe the muscle synergies accompanying steering of walking along curved trajectories, in orde...
The regulation of walking speed is easily achieved. However, the central nervous system (CNS) must c...
Purpose: A muscle synergies model was suggested to represent a simplifying motor control mechanism b...
To handle the rich repertoire of behavioural goals, the CNS has to control the many degrees of freed...
We examined the patterns of joint kinematics and torques in two kinds of sagittal plane reaching mov...
The motor cortex controls motor behaviors by generating movement-specific signals and transmitting t...
The musculoskeletal structure of the human and animal body provides multiple solutions for performin...
Bell. Control of the wrist in three-joint arm movements to multiple directions in the horizontal pla...
We describe the muscle synergies accompanying steering of walking along curved trajectories, in orde...
Contains fulltext : 151625.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)The human movem...
Moving the arm is complicated by mechanical interactions that arise between limb segments. Such inte...
Abstract—Motor synergies have been investigated since the 1980s as a simplifying paradigm of motor c...
How the CNS masters the many degrees of freedom of the musculoskeletal system to control goal-direct...
How the CNS selects the appropriate muscle patterns to achieve a behavioral goal is an open question...
Controlling the movement of the arm to achieve a goal, such as reaching for an object, is challengin...
We describe the muscle synergies accompanying steering of walking along curved trajectories, in orde...
The regulation of walking speed is easily achieved. However, the central nervous system (CNS) must c...
Purpose: A muscle synergies model was suggested to represent a simplifying motor control mechanism b...
To handle the rich repertoire of behavioural goals, the CNS has to control the many degrees of freed...
We examined the patterns of joint kinematics and torques in two kinds of sagittal plane reaching mov...
The motor cortex controls motor behaviors by generating movement-specific signals and transmitting t...
The musculoskeletal structure of the human and animal body provides multiple solutions for performin...
Bell. Control of the wrist in three-joint arm movements to multiple directions in the horizontal pla...
We describe the muscle synergies accompanying steering of walking along curved trajectories, in orde...
Contains fulltext : 151625.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)The human movem...
Moving the arm is complicated by mechanical interactions that arise between limb segments. Such inte...
Abstract—Motor synergies have been investigated since the 1980s as a simplifying paradigm of motor c...