Description
The file is restricted for YU community access only.
The file is restricted for YU community access only.
Abstract
We take motion for granted. As you flipped the cover page to this paper or scrolled
down on your computer screen by moving a computer mouse, you probably did not calculate
the exact trajectory of your hand and think about the exact muscle contractions needed to
execute that specific course of action. And yet we perform simple actions such as these
constantly. When we decide that we want to move in a certain way, the amazing
computational machines that are our brains are somehow able to subconsciously calculate the
precise muscle contractions needed to achieve that motion. The human brain, and in fact, the
brain of all animals, is an expert in solving the control problem: determining the required
input parameters for the system’s variables and deriving the values required for those
parameters to achieve a desired outcome. Put more simply, we subconsciously figure out
which muscles need to be contracted or relaxed and the exact extent of that change that is
required.