Pages that link to "Item:Q579154"
From MaRDI portal
The following pages link to A hierarchical neural-network model for control and learning of voluntary movement (Q579154):
Displaying 37 items.
- Ideomotor feedback control in a recurrent neural network (Q309520) (← links)
- Cerebellum-inspired neural network solution of the inverse kinematics problem (Q310154) (← links)
- A simple strategy for jumping straight up (Q435768) (← links)
- Feedback error learning and nonlinear adaptive control (Q705594) (← links)
- Self-organized control of bipedal locomotion by neural oscillators in unpredictable environment (Q811435) (← links)
- Regularity in an environment produces an internal torque pattern for biped balance control (Q885435) (← links)
- Coordinates transformation and learning control for visually-guided voluntary movement with iteration: A Newton-like method in a function space (Q1111974) (← links)
- A real time learning algorithm for recurrent analog neural networks (Q1262830) (← links)
- Virtual trajectory and stiffness ellipse during multijoint arm movement predicted by neural inverse models (Q1310083) (← links)
- Stability of feedback error learning scheme (Q1605362) (← links)
- Emergence of bipedal locomotion through entrainment among the neuro-musculo-skeletal system and the environment (Q1817037) (← links)
- Human hand impedance characteristics during maintained posture (Q1898098) (← links)
- An improved scheme for direct adaptive control of dynamical systems using backpropagation neural networks (Q1901484) (← links)
- A MIMO variable structure model of the controller of voluntary arm movements: An identification study (Q1905931) (← links)
- A neural network controller with PID compensation for trajectory tracking of robotic manipulators (Q1925054) (← links)
- Power quality control of an autonomous wind-diesel power system based on hybrid intelligent controller (Q1932113) (← links)
- Fuzzy neuronal model of motor control inspired by cerebellar pathways to online and gradually learn inverse biomechanical functions in the presence of delay (Q1990671) (← links)
- Lyapunov-Krasovskii stable T2FNN controller for a class of nonlinear time-delay systems (Q2001169) (← links)
- The impact of static output nonlinearities on the control strategies that humans use in command-following tasks (Q2027357) (← links)
- From internal models toward metacognitive AI (Q2069011) (← links)
- A model for the transfer of control from the brain to the spinal cord through synaptic learning (Q2137283) (← links)
- Bipedal locomotion: toward unified concepts in robotics and neuroscience (Q2372986) (← links)
- Stability and motor adaptation in human arm movements (Q2373075) (← links)
- Adjustment of the human arm viscoelastic properties to the direction of reaching (Q2373090) (← links)
- Learning visuomotor transformations for gaze-control and grasping (Q2373137) (← links)
- Concurrent adaptation of force and impedance in the redundant muscle system (Q2376448) (← links)
- A theory of cerebellar cortex and adaptive motor control based on two types of universal function approximation capability (Q2418119) (← links)
- Learning combined feedback and feedforward control of a musculoskeletal system (Q2564078) (← links)
- Forward models for physiological motor control (Q2564342) (← links)
- Self-tuning optimal regulation of respiratory motor output by Hebbian covariance learning (Q2564349) (← links)
- Control of robots using radial basis function neural networks with dead-zone (Q3019216) (← links)
- Different Predictions by the Minimum Variance and Minimum Torque-Change Models on the Skewness of Movement Velocity Profiles (Q3160474) (← links)
- Controller design for natural and robotic systems with transmission delays (Q4785075) (← links)
- New Supervised Learning Theory Applied to Cerebellar Modeling for Suppression of Variability of Saccade End Points (Q5378200) (← links)
- Associative anticipatory learning and control of the cerebellar cortex based on the spike-timing-dependent plasticity of the parallel fiber-Purkinje cell synapses (Q6072432) (← links)
- Chaos may enhance expressivity in cerebellar granular layer (Q6078677) (← links)
- Computational reproductions of external force field adaption without assuming desired trajectories (Q6078727) (← links)