In our daily lives, we make hundreds of movements with our body to achieve the daily goals we set for ourselves. Although we perform such movements with relative ease, underlying this performance is the complex control of a tremendous number of elements, called degrees of freedom (DOF). For instance, thousands of neurons, dozens of muscles, and several joint-angles are involved when grasping a cup of coffee from our desk. Fascinatingly, in our daily life movements, we are rarely aware of all these DOF, and how we should control them to perform a movement. We do not focus on which muscles need to be activated to displace the arm—we just do it.In my thesis, I examined the idea that DOF in our body are functioning in groups, i.e., coordinated ...