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Focal dystonia and the Sensory-Motor Integrative Loop for Enacting (SMILE)
2014
Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
Performing accurate movements requires preparation, execution, and monitoring mechanisms. The first two are coded by the motor system, the latter by the sensory system. To provide an adaptive neural basis to overt behaviors, motor and sensory information has to be properly integrated in a reciprocal feedback loop. Abnormalities in this sensory-motor loop are involved in movement disorders such as focal dystonia, a hyperkinetic alteration affecting only a specific body part and characterized by
doi:10.3389/fnhum.2014.00458
pmid:24999327
pmcid:PMC4064702
fatcat:jlcc6wjpnffetiauctxyq54mfe