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Motor control theories and their applications

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TLDR
The equilibrium-point (referent configuration) hypothesis, the uncontrolled manifold hypothesis, and the idea of synergies based on the principle of motor abundance are described, which are viewed as the most promising ones in the field of motor control.
Abstract
We describe several infl uential hypotheses in the field of motor control including the equilibrium-point (referent confi guration) hypothesis, the uncontrolled manifold hypothesis, and the idea of synergies based on the principle of motor abundance. The equilibrium-point hypothesis is based on the idea of control with thresholds for activation of neuronal pools; it provides a framework for analysis of both voluntary and involuntary movements. In particular, control of a single muscle can be adequately described with changes in the threshold of motor unit recruitment during slow muscle stretch (threshold of the tonic stretch reflex). Unlike the ideas of internal models, the equilibrium-point hypothesis does not assume neural computations of mechanical variables. The uncontrolled manifold hypothesis is based on the dynamic system approach to movements; it offers a toolbox to analyze synergic changes within redundant sets of elements related to stabilization of potentially important performance variables. The referent confi guration hypothesis and the principle of abundance can be naturally combined into a single coherent scheme of control of multi-element systems. A body of experimental data on healthy persons and patients with movement disorders are reviewed in support of the mentioned hypotheses. In particular, movement disorders associated with spasticity are considered as consequences of an impaired ability to shift threshold of the tonic stretch reflex within the whole normal range. Technical details and applications of the mentioned hypo theses to studies of motor learning are described. We view the mentioned hypotheses as the most promising ones in the field of motor control, based on a solid physical and neurophysiological foundation.

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Citations
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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

On the relations between the direction of two-dimensional arm movements and cell discharge in primate motor cortex

TL;DR: The orderly variation of cell discharge with the direction of movement and the fact that cells related to only one of the eight directions of movement tested were rarely observed indicate that movements in a particular direction are not subserved by motor cortical cells uniquely related to that movement.
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Spatial control of arm movements

TL;DR: Human subjects were instructed to point one hand to different visual targets which were randomly sequenced, using a paradigm which allowed two degrees of freedom, and trajectories of the hand in space were observed.
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The uncontrolled manifold concept: identifying control variables for a functional task

TL;DR: An operational meaning to ” controlled” and ”uncontrolled” is given and a method of analysis through which hypotheses about controlled and uncontrolled degrees of freedom can be tested is described, finding that, for the task of sit-to-stand, the position of the center of mass in the sagittal plane was controlled.
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Once More on the Equilibrium-Point Hypothesis (λ Model) for Motor Control

TL;DR: The equilibrium control hypothesis (λ model) is considered with special reference to the length-force invariant characteristic of the muscle together with central and reflex systems subserving its activity.
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