Neuroscience of Movement
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We’ve engineered a life that minimizes effort. Food arrives. Work happens from chairs. Entertainment comes to us. But the brain didn’t evolve for efficiency — it evolved for interaction. This episode looks at the neuroscience behind movement and why it may be more foundational to how we think and feel than we realize.
Due to technical difficulties, this episode is audio-only. We hope to resume video next episode, but we’ll keep you posted.
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>> Have questions, stories, or topics you want us to cover? Email us at info@brainblownpodcast.com.
>> Learn more at www.brainblownpodcast.com
Episodes Referenced:
Phantom Limbs (S2, Mini 1)
Motivation (Season 2, Mini 2)
Long-Term Decisions (Season 3, Mini 2)
REFERENCES:
- A New Dynamic Model of the Cortico-Basal Ganglia Loop — Atsushi Nambu
- A Computational Neuroanatomy for Motor Control — Reza Shadmehr & John W. Krakauer
- The Tale of the Dueling Neurosurgeons — Sam Kean
- Exercise-Induced Neuroplasticity: A Mechanistic Model and Prospects for Promoting Plasticity — El-Sayes, Harasym, Turco, Locke & Nelson
- Movement: How the Brain Communicates with the World — Andrew B. Schwartz
- Impact of Physical Activity and Exercise on the Epigenome in Skeletal Muscle and Effects on Systemic Metabolism — Julio Plaza-Díaz et al.
- Recent Advances in the Study of the Neurobiological Mechanisms Behind the Effects of Physical Activity on Mood, Resilience and Emotional Disorders — Chong Chen & Shin Nakagawa
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