Literature DB >> 22288396

Hierarchies in action and motor control.

Sebo Uithol1, Iris van Rooij, Harold Bekkering, Pim Haselager.   

Abstract

In analyses of the motor system, two hierarchies are often posited: The first-the action hierarchy-is a decomposition of an action into subactions and sub-subactions. The second-the control hierarchy-is a postulated hierarchy in the neural control processes that are supposed to bring about the action. A general assumption in cognitive neuroscience is that these two hierarchies are internally consistent and provide complementary descriptions of neuronal control processes. In this article, we suggest that neither offers a complete explanation and that they cannot be reconciled in a logical or conceptually coherent way. Furthermore, neither pays proper attention to the dynamics and temporal aspects of neural control processes. We will explore an alternative hierarchical organization in which causality is inherent in the dynamics over time. Specifically, high levels of the hierarchy encode more stable (goal-related) representations, whereas lower levels represent more transient (actions and motor acts) kinematics. If employed properly, a hierarchy based on this latter principle of temporal extension is not subject to the problems that plague the traditional accounts.

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Mesh:

Year:  2012        PMID: 22288396     DOI: 10.1162/jocn_a_00204

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Cogn Neurosci        ISSN: 0898-929X            Impact factor:   3.225


  14 in total

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Review 5.  The Take Control Course: Conceptual Rationale for the Development of a Transdiagnostic Group for Common Mental Health Problems.

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7.  A review of intentional and cognitive control in autism.

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8.  Event-related brain potentials for goal-related power grips.

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9.  Action recognition depends on observer's level of action control and social personality traits.

Authors:  Sasha Ondobaka; Roger D Newman-Norlund; Floris P de Lange; Harold Bekkering
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10.  How action selection can be embodied: intracranial gamma band recording shows response competition during the Eriksen flankers test.

Authors:  Fausto Caruana; Sebo Uithol; Gaetano Cantalupo; Ivana Sartori; Giorgio Lo Russo; Pietro Avanzini
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