Faculté / Département ⤶ |
Répertoire par Unités | Répertoire par Projets | Répertoire des Chercheurs |
Répertoire par Collaborations | Classement par Domaines | Classement par Frascati | Disciplines CREF |
Unité : Unité de Recherche en Neurophysiologie et de Biomécanique du Mouvement | ULB382
How the brain orchestrates sensorimotor control of various motor acts is still unclear. Of potential relevance to sensorimotor control are two brain–peripheral coupling phenomena: Corticokinematic coupling (CKC), the coupling between brain and repetitive movement kinematics, and corticomuscular coupling (CMC), the coupling between brain and muscle activity at 20 Hz mainly seen during steady muscle contractions. Both couplings can be revealed with scalp electrophysiological recordings such as EEG and MEG. This project draws on movement biomechanics approaches to answer 3 major neuroscience questions: Which aspects of the communication between the brain and the periphery do CKC and CMC support? To which extent these couplings are functionally/behaviorally relevant? And what is the role of the cerebellum in maintaining these couplings? The key innovative element is the focus on the low frequency oscillations, which hold the promise of being the medium of proprioceptive signaling, a central component of the most promising theory of sensorimotor control. Collaborations : Thomas Legrand, Scott Mongold, Gilles Naeije, Xavier De Tiège
• F.R.S.-FNRS et Fonds associés (hors FRIA)