03922nam 2200721Ia 450 991101980780332120200520144314.09786612348105978128234810312823481089780470515563047051556297804705155700470515570(CKB)1000000000377249(EBL)470539(SSID)ssj0000309253(PQKBManifestationID)11233318(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000309253(PQKBWorkID)10266934(PQKB)10939372(MiAaPQ)EBC470539(OCoLC)181186983(Perlego)2774975(EXLCZ)99100000000037724919980724d1998 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrSensory guidance of movement /[editors, Gregory R. Bock and Jamie A. Goode]Chichester ;New York John Wiley19981 online resource (362 p.)Novartis Foundation symposium ;218"Symposium on Sensory Guidance of Movement, held at the Novartis Foundation, London, 20-22 January 1998"-- P. v.9780471982623 0471982628 Includes bibliographical references and indexes.SENSORY GUIDANCE OF MOVEMENT; Contents; Participants; Chairman's introduction; Grasping an object: one movement, several components; Vision for perception and vision for action in the primate brain; General discussion I; Sensory input and control of grip; Motor areas on the medial wall of the hemisphere; Grasping objects and grasping action meanings: the dual role of monkey rostroventral premotor cortex (area F5); General discussion I1; Posterior parietal areas specialized for eye movements (LIP) and reach (PRR) using a common coordinate frameHow do visual instructions influence the motor system?Online visual control of the arm; General discussion I11; Cortical control of whole-arm motor tasks; The importance of the cortico-motoneuronal system for control of grasp; Combination, complementarity and automatic control: a role for the cerebellum in learning movement coordination; Construction of a reach-to-grasp; Cerebellum and the sensory guidance of movement; The cerebellum, predictive control and motor coordination; Internal models for motor control; The apraxias are higher-order defects of sensorimotor integrationFinal discussionIndex of contributors; Subject indexSensory Guidance of Movement Chairman: Mitchell Glickstein 1998 In the past few years there has been an increasing recognition of the multiplicity of sensory and motor areas of the cerebral cortex. However, still relatively little is known about the way in which sensory areas are functionally linked to motor areas. On the basis of current anatomical evidence, there are three major pathways involved in this linking. One of these routes is by way of cortico-cortical links, beginning in the primary sensory areas of the cortex, and connecting via a series of synaptic relays to motor or premotor arNovartis Foundation symposium ;218.Sensorimotor integrationCongressesSensorimotor cortexCongressesCerebellumCongressesSensorimotor integrationSensorimotor cortexCerebellum573.7573.737612.76Bock Gregory322650Goode Jamie283336Symposium on Sensory Guidance of Movement(1998 :London, England)MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9911019807803321Sensory guidance of movement4421051UNINA