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Error Correction, Sensory Prediction, and Adaptation in Motor Control

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2010

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Annual Reviews
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Shadmehr, Reza, Maurice A. Smith, and John W. Krakauer. Forthcoming. Error correction, sensory prediction, and adaptation in motor control. Annual Review of Neuroscience 33.

Abstract

Motor control is the study of how organisms make accurate goal-directed movements. There are two problems that the motor system must solve in order to achieve such control. The first problem is that sensory feedback is noisy and delayed, which can make movements inaccurate and unstable. The second problem is that the relationship between a motor command and the movement it produces is variable, as the body and the environment can both change. A solution is to build adaptive internal models of the body and the world. The predictions of these internal models, called forward models because they transform motor commands into sensory consequences, can be used to both produce a lifetime of calibrated movements, and to improve the ability of the sensory system to estimate the state of the body and the world around it. Forward models are only useful if they produce unbiased predictions. Evidence shows that forward models remain calibrated through motor adaptation: learning driven by sensory prediction errors.

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forward models, reaching, saccades, motor adaptation, error feedback, sensorimotor integration

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Error Correction, Sensory Prediction, and Adaptation… : DASH Story 2015-09-30
Having open articles lets me follow the state of the art in important research areas - I can follow some of the details. I see it like eating in a resteraunt where you can see the cooks premaring and cooking the food - you may not care about the details but it by presenting it in an open and honest manner one feels that the research is trustworthy.