Int J Sports Med 1985; 06(1): 2-14
DOI: 10.1055/s-2008-1025805
Review

© Georg Thieme Verlag Stuttgart · New York

Basic Neurophysiologv of Motor Skills in Sport: A Review*

H.-D. Henatsch, H. H. Langer
  • Zentrum Physiologie und Pathophysioiogie, Universität Göttingen, Abteilung Neuro- und Sinnesphysiologie, und Zentrum Interdisziplinäre Einrichtungen, Abteilung Arbeits- und Sportphysiologie, Humboldtallee 23, D-3400 Göttingen, FRG
* Revised English version of a lecture, originally given in German at an International Symposium in Heidelberg, 1982 (see ref. 20)
Further Information

Publication History

Publication Date:
14 March 2008 (online)

Abstract

The broad spectrum of skills in sport, with their high demands on strength, speed, endurance, coordination, and flexibility, represents one of the greatest challenges to human motor performances. However, the basic neurophysiological mechanisms in sport are not principally different from those in everyday motojr acts. This review describes some of the relevant neurophysiological facts in a comprehensive frame, with emphasis on new findings and changes of traditional concepts. Going from simple to increasingly complex processes, the following chapters, each with several subtopics, will be treated: (1) peripheral and spinal building blocks of motoricity; (2) elementary grammar of the spinal cord; (3) some aspects of spinal/supraspinal coordination in the brainstem; (4) achievements and problems of cerebral motor control; and (5) principles of motor learning in sport. In conclusion, the recent progress in neurophysiological research on motor systems allows recognition of a substantially new trend, a change of “paradigms": old mechanistic concepts of reflex chains and motor functions, like a complicated automaton, are increasingly replaced by the idea of a sensing, planning, and self-operating subject whose mental processes are decisive for motor behavior, particularly in sport. Further mutual stimulation and support can be expected from this development between the science of sport and that of neuro- and psychophysiology.

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