SOW-DGCN23
Motor Control
Course infoSchedule
Course moduleSOW-DGCN23
Credits (ECTS)6
Category-
Language of instructionEnglish
Offered byRadboud University; Faculty of Social Sciences; Cognitive Neuroscience;
Lecturer(s)
PreviousNext 1
Lecturer
dr. E.G.G. Maris
Other course modules lecturer
Examiner
prof. dr. W.P. Medendorp
Other course modules lecturer
Contactperson for the course
prof. dr. W.P. Medendorp
Other course modules lecturer
Lecturer
prof. dr. W.P. Medendorp
Other course modules lecturer
Lecturer
prof. dr. R.G.J. Meulenbroek
Other course modules lecturer
Academic year2018
Period
SEM1  (03/09/2018 to 03/02/2019)
Starting block
SEM1
Course mode
full-time
Remarks-
Registration using OSIRISYes
Course open to students from other facultiesNo
Pre-registrationNo
Waiting listNo
Placement procedure-
Aims

This course will provide students with a thorough background in the neurobiological and functional properties of the human motor system. The content is aimed at providing students with an understanding of many of the important principles and modern theories in motor planning, control, estimation, prediction, learning and coordination necessary to conduct, critically evaluate, and disseminate research of the motor system. This will be achieved by providing a multi-disciplinary overview of motor control, covering theoretical and experimental work from the fields of biomechanics, computational neuroscience, experimental psychology and robotics, and focusing on the hierarchical organization of the motor system considered from a neuroanatomical, neurophysiological and cognitive point of view.

Content

Neurobiological aspects. This course will provide a detailed overview of the neurobiological basis of the hierarchically organized human motor control system, including the (sub)cortical structures involved in the planning and execution of movements, the peripheral neuromuscular system and its specific biophysical make-up, and the various reflex mechanisms involved in motion. Fields that will be covered are neuroanatomy, neurophysiology, biomechanics, and psychonomics.

Functional aspects. We will focus on eye, head, and arm movements, as well as on walking, drawing and handwriting. Research paradigms that are promising for future neurocognitive research, stemming from experimental psychology and human movement science, will be discussed.

Theoretical/quantitative aspects. An overview will be presented of the theoretical models of the planning and execution of movements that address problems related to solving inverse kinematics and inverse dynamics of kinematically redundant limbs, feedforward and feedback mechanisms in motor systems, learning and self-organization and cognitive constraints which affect human motor performance. All models will be discussed in the context of available experimental data.

Additional aspects. Where relevant, implications of theories, models and research findings for applied and clinical research purposes will be discussed. Part of the course will focus on experimental methods for studying human motor control, including analysis tools like computational modelling and rigid-body analysis, EMG, EEG, MEG, and fMRI.

Assumed previous knowledge
This course is for CNS students only. Non-CNS students can contact Ellen Janssen (e.janssen@donders.ru.nl) or Arno Koning ( a.koning@donders.ru.nl).

Required materials
Course material
Lecture notes
Literature
Relevant chapters from handbooks of neuroanatomy, neurophysiology, biomechanics and psychonomics
Literature
*Lecture notes *Relevant chapters from handbooks of neuroanatomy, neurophysiology, biomechanics and psychonomics and recent papers in top-quality journals like Biological Cybernetics, Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Human Movement Science,
Literature
Recent papers in top-quality journals like Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, Journal of Neurophysiology, Journal of Neuroscience, Nature, Neuroscience, Neural Computation, Neuron, Psychological Bulletin, Psychological Review, and Science.

Recommended materials
Articles
Flash, T., & Senjowski, T.J., (2001). Computational approaches to motor control. Current Opinion in Neurobiology, 11, 655-662.
Articles
Scott (2008). Inconvenient Truths about neural processing in primary motor cortex. J Physiol 586.5,1217-1224.
Book
Kandel, E., Schwartz J.H., & Jessell T.M. (2000) Principles of Neural Science. Chapters 33-43. McGraw-Hill. (new edition 2013) McMahon, T.A. (1984) Muscles, reflexes and locomotion. Princeton University Press.
Book
McMahon, T.A. (1984) Muscles, reflexes and locomotion.Princeton University Press.
Book
Rosenbaum, D.A. (1992). Human motor control, Chapters 2-11. San Diego: Academic Press.
Book
Shadmehr, R. & Wise, S.P. (2005) The computational neurobiology of reaching and pointing. MIT Press
Articles
Wolpert, D.M. & Diedrichsen, J. & Flanagan J.R. (2011) Principles of sensorimotor learning. Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 12, 739-751.
Book
Haith, A.M. and Krakauer, J.W. (2012) Model-based and model-free mechanisms of human motor learning. Progress in Motor Control.
Articles
Crawford J.D., Henriques D.Y., & Medendorp, W.P. (2011). Three-dimensional transformations for goal-directed action. Annual Reviews Neuroscience; 34, 309-31.

Instructional modes
Experiments, computer simulations
Attendance MandatoryYes

Remark
Active participation in experiments, and computer simulations

Lecture
Attendance MandatoryYes

Remark
Lectures, student assignments and computer simulations. Student assignments will be made available on a special course-s

Student assignments
Attendance MandatoryYes

Tests
Closed book exam
Test weight1
OpportunitiesBlock SEM1, Block SEM2

Remark
NOTE: enrollment for a course automatically registers you for its exam