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Related Concept Videos

Motor Unit Stimulation01:20

Motor Unit Stimulation

When the neuron of a motor unit fires an action potential, it triggers a series of events, leading to a twitch contraction in the muscle fibers. The process of excitation-contraction coupling is crucial in relaying the action potential to the muscle fibers.
The latent period of contraction marks the onset of excitation-contraction coupling, when the action potential propagates across the sarcolemma, preparing the muscle fibers for contraction. As the fibers enter the contraction phase, the...
Direct Motor Pathways01:11

Direct Motor Pathways

The direct motor pathways, also known as the pyramidal tracts, are a group of neural pathways that originate in the brain and descend through the spinal cord. They control the voluntary movement of the body. There are two major direct motor pathways: the corticospinal and the corticobulbar tracts.
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Indirect Motor Pathways01:22

Indirect Motor Pathways

The indirect motor or extrapyramidal pathways originate in the brainstem, the lower portion of the brain that connects it to the spinal cord. They consist of several distinct tracts, each with specialized functions. The four main tracts of the indirect motor pathways are the vestibulospinal tract, the reticulospinal tract, the tectospinal tract, and the rubrospinal tract.
The vestibulospinal tract originates in the vestibular nuclei of the brainstem. The vestibular system detects changes in...

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Related Experiment Video

Updated: May 8, 2026

The "Motor" in Implicit Motor Sequence Learning: A Foot-stepping Serial Reaction Time Task
10:39

The "Motor" in Implicit Motor Sequence Learning: A Foot-stepping Serial Reaction Time Task

Published on: May 3, 2018

Motor response recognition.

K M Newell1, J L Boucher

  • 1a Children's Research Center , University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

Journal of Motor Behavior
|August 20, 2013
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

This study shows that estimating movement distance involves two separate processes: evaluating feedback and assigning a scale label. Learning to associate labels, like inches or millimeters, with feedback is a key component.

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Related Experiment Videos

Last Updated: May 8, 2026

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Area of Science:

  • Motor control
  • Human motor learning
  • Cognitive psychology

Background:

  • Motor performance relies on processing sensory feedback.
  • Estimating movement outcomes may involve distinct perceptual and cognitive steps.
  • Understanding these processes informs theories of motor skill acquisition.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate if estimating response outcomes involves independent processes of feedback evaluation and scale-label association.
  • To differentiate between the accuracy of movement execution and the accuracy of movement estimation.

Main Methods:

  • Participants practiced a linear positioning task.
  • Movement distance was estimated in either inches or millimeters.
  • Movement reproduction accuracy was assessed in a criterion trial.

Main Results:

  • Estimation errors were significantly larger than movement execution errors for all participants.
  • No significant difference in movement execution error was found between groups using different units (inches vs. millimeters).
  • The group estimating in inches showed smaller estimation errors, suggesting a learned association with the feedback.

Conclusions:

  • The findings support a two-process hypothesis for response outcome estimation: feedback evaluation and label association.
  • The ability to accurately associate numerical labels with sensory feedback is a learned skill.
  • This research contributes to understanding the cognitive mechanisms underlying motor learning and performance estimation.