Getting your body moving doesn’t just keep you fit — it might actually turn back the clock on your brain, according to fascinating new research. The latest findings from Penn State College of Medicine ...
A new study by neuroscientists shows that our brain deals with different forms of visual uncertainty during movements in distinct ways. Depending on the type of uncertainty, planning and execution of ...
Doidge (2015) notes that the fifth principle of the Feldenkrais Method, “Differentiation is easiest to make when the stimulus is smallest,” reveals a central concept in neuroplastic learning: the ...
Why do our mental images stay sharp even when we are moving fast? A team of neuroscientists led by Professor Maximilian Jösch at the Institute of Science and Technology Austria (ISTA) has identified a ...
Norman Doidge (2015) points out that Moshé Feldenkrais encapsulated the importance of slow movement awareness with the following: “The delay between thought and action is the basis for awareness” ...
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