Mel - you sure do use some fancy terms-
Perhaps if you were more familiar with this 'apparent fact' you would be
aware that the research doesn't just indicate TrAb activation "in a given
limited situation" but in both upper and lower limb movements, at varying
speeds, as well as during trunk perturbation (expected and unexpected),
independent of direction of movement.
How much evidence do you want before you accept that Tr Ab is part of a
complex motor activity involving multiarticular movement?
Excuse me if I have misinterpreted your comment but I did have genuine
trouble 'unpacking' what you were trying to say.
John Spencer
----- Original Message -----
From: <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Friday, August 16, 2002 6:16 PM
Subject: Movements not Muscles?
> John Spencer< [log in to unmask]> writes:
>
> << Ironically, this is an important tenet in Dynamic Stabilisation work
Mel.
> >>
>
> ***When I sent through my original letter I was most aware of this
apparent
> fact, also knew that activation in a given limited situation does not
> necessarily mean integrated optimal involvement in some complex motor
> activity involving multiarticular movement whose patterns of muscular and
> other soft tissue involvement change from moment to moment. Note that a
> given motor strategy is ephemeral and situation dependent, where the
latter
> often is very transitory, opportunistic, nonlinear and indeterminate.
>
> Dr Mel C Siff
> Denver, USA
>
> http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Supertraining/
>
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