Roles of Proprioceptive Input in the Programming of Arm Trajectories

  1. C. Ghez,
  2. J. Gordon,
  3. M.F. Ghilardi*,
  4. C.N. Christakos*, and
  5. S.E. Cooper*
  1. *Center for Neurobiology and Behavior, New York State Psychiatric Institute, Program in Physical Therapy, College of Physicians & Surgeons, Columbia University, New York, New York 10032

This extract was created in the absence of an abstract.

Excerpt

It has been known for more than 100 years that loss or impairment of sensation in our limbs may produce severe disorders of movement and that sensory input plays a critical role in controlling movement. Indeed, the skin, muscles, and joints of our limbs are richly innervated by a variety of sensory receptors that convey proprioceptive information to all levels of the nervous system. What role this input plays in movement control has been a question of recurring interest but remains incompletely understood. In 1895, Mott and Sherrington demonstrated that surgical deafferentation of a monkey's limb produces severe disorders of movement and an unwillingness to use the limb in purposeful action. They therefore concluded that movement initiation requires the support of afferent information and proposed that coordinated movement results from the concatenation of reflex responses. Subsequently, however, it was established that deafferentation does not abolish the capacity to make purposeful...

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