2002

Advances in Computational Motor Control (ACMC) 2002

Proceedings

Think before you act, but prepare an assortment of partial actions before you think

P. Cisek

A computational neural model of laminar frontal cortex and basal ganglia interactions in movement control

J. Brown, D. Bullock and S. Grossberg

Preparatory activity in motor cortex reflects consolidation of specific internal models

R. Paz, T. Boraud, C. Natan, H. Bergman and E. Vaadia

Modeling neural control of hindlimb movement during cat locomotion

D. Ivashko, B. Prilutsky, J. Chapin and I. Rybak

Studying octopus motor control using a computerized dynamic model

Y. Yekutieli, R. Sagiv, B. Hochner and T. Flash

Time-varying muscle synergies as low-level control modules

A. D’Avella and E. Bizzi

Uncovering representation from trial-to-trial changes in performance during adaptation

O. Donchin and R. Shadmehr

A computational model of adaptation to novel stable and unstable dynamics

D. Franklin, R. Osu, E. Burdet, M. Kawato and T. Milner

Interpreting motor adaptation results within the framework of optimal feedback control

E. Todorov

Minimization of jerk, not torque change or end point error, mimics human movement in dynamically perturbing environments

K. Thoroughman and W. Wang

A model of dimensionality reduction in goal-oriented motions

E. Torres

Patterns in stroke patients’ submovements support adaptive forward/inverse learning model

B. Rohrer, H. Krebs, B. Volpe, W. Frontera, J. Stein and N. Hogan

 

This symposium is held as a satellite to the annual Society for Neuroscience meeting.  All submissions are peer-reviewed and those with the highest scores are included in the program.  The acceptance rate is below 50%.

 

Sponsored by the United States National Institutes of Health.