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- M M Churchland.
- Department of Neuroscience, Grossman Center for the Statistics of Mind, David Mahoney Center for Brain and Behavior Research, Kavli Institute for Brain Science, Columbia University Medical Center, New York, NY 10032, USA. Electronic address: mc3502@columbia.edu.
- Neuroscience. 2015 Jun 18;296:92-100.
AbstractThe study of motor control has long concerned itself with the origins of movement variability. Indeed, a common goal of many computational models of motor control is to predict the empirically observed patterns of movement variability. Competing models thus attempt to capture how the brain constrains variability that is detrimental and/or generates variability that might be beneficial. As humans, it is our own motor performance that interests us most we accept our variability as an essential part of being human, yet we are often frustrated when we cannot precisely repeat a desired movement. While movement variability is often productively studied in humans, uncovering its neural origins requires animal models. Below we describe recent research in which we were able to determine an important source of movement variability using a non-human primate model: the rhesus macaque. The macaque, much like the human, can produce flexible yet highly precise behavior. For this reason, among others, the macaque was an ideal model for the study of movement variability.Copyright © 2015. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
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