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  2. Proprioception and motor control - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proprioception_and_Motor...

    Proprioception refers to the sensory information relayed from muscles, tendons, and skin that allows for the perception of the body in space. This feedback allows for more fine control of movement. In the brain, proprioceptive integration occurs in the somatosensory cortex, and motor commands are generated in the motor cortex.

  3. Proprioception - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proprioception

    Proprioception was then found to be involved in other tropisms and to be central also to the control of nutation. [79] The discovery of proprioception in plants has generated an interest in the popular science and generalist media. [80] [81] This is because this discovery questions a long-lasting a priori that we have on plants.

  4. Sensory processing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sensory_processing

    Other sensory modalities exist, for example the vestibular sense (balance and the sense of movement) and proprioception (the sense of knowing one's position in space) Along with Time (The sense of knowing where one is in time or activities). It is important that the information of these different sensory modalities must be relatable.

  5. Proprioception: the Unsung Hero of the Senses - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/proprioception-unsung-hero...

    One of the most important of these senses is called proprioception, or the sense of position. It's defined as the conscious or unconscious awareness of joint position, and it refers to being able ...

  6. Multisensory integration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multisensory_integration

    An example is the Stratton's (1896) experiments on the somatosensory effects of wearing vision-distorting prism glasses. [ 11 ] [ 12 ] Multisensory interactions or crossmodal effects in which the perception of a stimulus is influenced by the presence of another type of stimulus are referred since very early in the past.

  7. Eye–hand coordination - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eye–hand_coordination

    Humans have the ability to aim eye movement toward the hand without vision, using the sense of proprioception, with only minor errors related to internal knowledge of limb position. [7] It has been shown the proprioception of limbs, in both active and passive movement, results in saccadic overshoots when the hands are used to guide eye movement.

  8. Motor program - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motor_program

    The initial conditions of the movement, such as the proprioceptive information of the limbs and body. The response specifications for the motor programs, which are the parameters used in the generalized motor program, such as speed and force.

  9. Body schema - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Body_schema

    Body schema is an organism's internal model of its own body, including the position of its limbs. The neurologist Sir Henry Head originally defined it as a postural model of the body that actively organizes and modifies 'the impressions produced by incoming sensory impulses in such a way that the final sensation of body position, or of locality, rises into consciousness charged with a relation ...