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Synergy




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Dettagli

Genere:Libro
Lingua: Inglese
Pubblicazione: 03/2008





Note Editore

Synergy dicusses a general problem in biology: the lack of an adequate language for formulating biologically specific problems. It describes the recent progress in the control and coordination of human movement. The book begins with a brief history of movement studies and reviews the current central controversies in the area of control of movements with an emphasis on the equilibrium-point hypothesis. An operational definition of synergy is introduced and a method of analysis of synergies is described based on the uncontrolled manifold hypothesis. Further this method is used to characterize synergies in a variety of tasks including such common motor tasks as standing, pointing, reaching, standing-up, and manipulation of hand-held objects. Applications of this method to movements by persons with neurological disorders, persons with atypical development and healthy elderly persons are illustrated, as well as changes in motor synergies with practice. Possible neurophysiological mechanisms of synergies are also discussed with the focus on such conspicuous structures as the spinal cord, the cerebellum, the basal ganglia, and the cortex of the large hemispheres. A variety of models are discussed based on different computational and neurophysiological principles. Possible applications of the introduced definition of synergies to other areas such as perception and language are discussed.




Sommario

1.1 - Synergies and Non-synergies: A Few Examples
1.2 - Palama's Concept of Synergy
1.3 - Inanimate "synergies": The Table and the Rusty Bucket
1.4 - Examples of Biological Synergies
1.5 - The Definition: Three Components of a Synergy
2.1 - Ancient Greece and Rome
2.3 - The Century of Frogs, Photography, and Amazing Guesses
2.4 - The Twentieth Century: Wars of Ideas
2.5 - Nikolai Alexandrovich Bernstein and Movement Science in the Soviet Union
2.6 - History of Synergies and the Problem of Motor Redundancy
2.7 - Problems with Studying Biological Movement
3.1 - Israel Gelfand and Michael Tsetlin
3.2 - Structural Units and the Principle of Minimal Interaction
3.3 - Motor control: Programs and Internal Models
3.4 - The Equilibrium-point hypothesis
3.4.1 - Experimental Foundations of the Equilibrium-point hypothesis
3.4.3 - Three basic trajectories within the equilibrium- point hypothesis
3.4.4 - Equilibrium-point control of multi-muscle systems
3.4.5. - The mass-spring analogy and other misconceptions
4.1 - The Uncontrolled Manifold Hypothesis
4.2 - Modes as Elemental Variables
4.2.1. - Force Modes
4.2.2. - Muscle Modes
4.2.3. - Experimental Identification of the Jacobian
4.3 - Stability, Variability, and within-a-trial Analysis of Synergies
4.4 - Other Computational Tools to Study Synergies
4.4.1. - Principal Component Analysis and Uncontrolled Manifold
4.4.2. - Analysis of Surrogate Data Sets
4.5 - Timing Synergies: Do they exist?
5.1 - Kinematic synergies
5.1.1. - Postural Synergies in Standing
5.1.2. - Sit-to-Stand Task
5.1.3. - Reaching
5.1.4. - Reaching in a Changing Force Field
5.1.5. - Multi-Joint Pointing
5.1.6. - Quick-Draw Pistol Shooting
5.2 - Kinetic synergies
5.3 - Multi-Digit Synergies
5.3.1. - Force and Moment Stabilization during Multi-Finger Pressing
5.3.2. - The Role of Timing Errors
5.3.3. - Emergence and Disappearance of Synergies
5.3.4. - Anticipatory Synergy Adjustments and Purposeful Destabilization of Performance
5.4 - Prehensile Synergies
5.4.1. - Hierarchical Control of Prehension
5.4.2. - Principle of Superposition
5.4.3. - Adjustments of Synergies: Chain Effects
5.4.4. - Hierarchies of Synergies
5.5 - Multi-muscle Synergies
5.5.1. - Anticipatory Postural Adustments
5.5.2. - Making a Step
5.5.3. - Multi-Muscle Syndergies in Hand Force Production
6.1 - Is there a "normal synergy"?
6.2 - Principle of Indeterminicity in Movement Studies
6.3 - Plasticity in the Central Nervous System
6.4 - Changes in Synergies with Age
6.4.1. - Effects of Age on Muscles and Neurons
6.4.2. - Effects of Age on Motor Coordination
6.5 - Synergies in Persons with Down syndrome
6.5.1. - Movements in Persons with Down syndrome
6.5.2. - Multi-finger Coordination in Down syndrome
6.5.3. - Effects of Practice on Movement in Down syndrome
6.5.4. - Relation of Unusual Synergies to Changes in the Cerebellum
6.6 - Synergies after Stroke
6.7 - Learning Movement Synergies
6.7.1. - Traditional Views on Motor Learning
6.7.2. - What can happen with a Synergy with Practice?
6.7.3. - Practicing Kinematic Tasks
6.7.4. - Practicing Kinetic Tasks
6.7.5. - Plastic Changes with Learning a Synergy
7.1 - Neurophysiological Structures and the Motor Function
7.2 - Synergies in the Spinal Cord
7.3 - Synergies and the Cerebellum
7.4 - Synergies and the Basal Ganglia
7.5 - Synergies and the Cortex of the Large Hemispheres
7.5.1. - TMS and the equilibrium-point hypothesis
7.5.2. - Studies of Neuronal Populations
8.1 - Synergies and the Control Theory
8.1.1 - Control: Basic Notions
8.1.2. - Open-loop and Closed-loop (feed-forward and feedback) Control
8.1.3. - A Simple Scheme of Synergic Control of a Multi-joint Movement
8.1.4. - Optimal Control and Synergies
8.2 - Synergies and Neural Networks
8.3 - Synergies Without Feedback
8.3.1. - Do Synergies Improve Accuracy?
8.3.2. - A Feed-forward Model with Separate Specification of Good and Bad Ariability
8.4 - Synergies and the Equilibrium-point Hypothesis
8.5 - Sensory Synergies
8.5.1. - Sensory synergies in Neurological Disorders
8.5.2. - Sensory-motor Interactions
8.5.3. - Sensory Synergies in Vertical Posture
8.5.4. - Multi-sensory Mechanisms
8.6 - Language as a Synergy
8.7 - Concluding Comments: What next?










Altre Informazioni

ISBN:

9780195333169

Condizione: Nuovo
Collana: (LIBERO)
Dimensioni: 163 x 25.4 x 236 mm Ø 706 gr
Formato: Copertina rigida
Illustration Notes:100 illustrations
Pagine Arabe: 432


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