Volume 12, Issue 2 , Pages 158-165, April 2008
The contractile field—A new model of human movement—Part 3
Summary
A new model, conceptually informed by the embryology and evolutionary biomechanics of vertebrate movement patterns, describes fields of interacting contractility. Each contractile field is modelled as embedding a primary sense organ. Contractile fields are whole organism in scope and are drawn from core mammalian movement patterns such as flexing/extending, lateral flexing, twisting left/right, sucking/squeezing, pulsating and peristaltic movements. Fields of contractility are textile-like in that they warp and weft, river-like in that they widen and narrow. Contractile fields converge to nodes and decussative (crossed) lines, from which they again reradiate.
Tuning between muscles within a contractile field, and tuning between fields, shapes movement patterns. An assessment methodology called ‘archetypal postures’ offers insight to the body's state of biomechanical tune.
Keywords: Contractile field, Embryology, Evolution, Biomechanical tune, Archetypal postures
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PII: S1360-8592(07)00118-0
doi:10.1016/j.jbmt.2007.11.001
© 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Refers to article:
- The contractile field—A new model of human movement
- The contractile field—A new model of human movement—Part 2
Volume 12, Issue 2 , Pages 158-165, April 2008
