Cooperative hand movements are known to be controlled by a task‐specific neural coupling associated with an involvement of the respective ipsilateral hemispheres. The aim of this …
J Masumoto, N Inui - Journal of Neurophysiology, 2015 - journals.physiology.org
The concept of hierarchical motor control has been viewed as a means of progressively decreasing the number of variables manipulated by each higher control level. We tested the …
M Gueugnon, K Torre, D Mottet… - Experimental brain …, 2014 - Springer
During bilateral coordination, some level of inter-hemispheric remapping (ie, the congruency between afferent and efferent force signals from both hemispheres) is required. In this case …
Motor control is a fundamental challenge for the central nervous system. In this review, we show that unimanual movements involve bi-hemispheric activation patterns that resemble …
We sought to understand differences in joint coordination between the dominant and nondominant arms when performing repetitive tasks. The uncontrolled manifold approach …
Y Taniguchi, B Burle, F Vidal, M Bonnet - Experimental brain research, 2001 - Springer
Reaction time (RT) is known to be longer for simultaneous bimanual responses than for unimanual ones. This phenomenon is called" bilateral deficit". To identify the mechanisms …
GA Ghacibeh, R Mirpuri, V Drago, Y Jeong… - Clinical …, 2007 - Elsevier
OBJECTIVE: To test for the presence and possible asymmetry of ipsilateral motor activation during unimanual and bimanual motor tasks. METHODS: Twelve right-handed healthy …
G Liuzzi, V Hörniß, M Zimerman, C Gerloff… - Journal of …, 2011 - Soc Neuroscience
Independent use of both hands is characteristic of human action in daily life. By nature, however, in-phase bimanual movements, for example clapping, are easier to accomplish …
Using fMRI, we investigated the neuronal structures controlling bimanual coordination applying a visuomotor coordination task. Recent studies suggest the existence of a …