|
See all pages
with references to "postural responses".
Excerpt - on Page 677: "
... movement.'" Age-related decrease in flexibility and range of motion might also affect the ability to control volitional movement or compensatory postural responses. Although it appears that normal age-related loss of range of motion is actually rather small,'" there is some evidence that ... "
|
|
Developmental Motor Disorders: A Neuropsychological Perspective (The Science and Practice of Neuropsychology)
by PhD Deborah Dewey Phd
See all pages
with references to "postural responses".
Excerpt - on Page 213: "
... AND BALANCE CONTROL: AN OVERVIEW The term motor coordination refers to the timing and sequence of activation of appro- priate postural responses to correct for perturbations to balance. ... "
Key Phrases:
New York, Adapted Physical Activity Quarterly, Human Movement Science, American Psychiatric Association, Academic Press, Guilford Press, childhood motor disorders, developmental motor disorders, children with motor learning difficulties, nonmotor factors, devaluing hypothesis, functional writing system
(see more)
|
|
See all pages
with references to "postural responses".
Excerpt - on Page 176: "
... Influence of stimulus parameters on human postural responses. Journal of Neurophysiology, 59, 1888-1905. Dietz, V. (1992). Human neuronal control of automatic functional movements: interaction between central programs and ... "
Key Phrases:
New York, Experimental Brain Research, Journal of Motor Behavior, Journal of Experimental Psychology, Academic Press, Biological Cybernetics, interlimb reflexes, spontaneous coordination tendencies, correlation function fluctuates, hand role differentiation, long descending motor tracts, motor tract axons
(see more)
|
|
Disorders of the Vestibular System
by Robert W. Baloh
See all pages
with references to "postural responses".
Excerpt - on Page 259: "
... another restriction influencing quantitative vestibulo-spinal assessment must be taken into account. There is substantial evidence that preparatory processes can modulate postural responses to external perturbations (Horak et al., 1989a). These central processes appear to be mostly a function of subject expectation, which ... "
|
|
| ||
| ||
| ||
| ||