The Science of Movement: How Physical Exercise Rewires the Brain for Resilience
A motor movement is the blueprint of neural activities required to perform a movement. It is created and transmitted through organized neurons. The program is frequently updated. Learning and skill can be developed if the program is repeated often enough. Voluntary movement is accompanied by a conscious awareness of the action; in contrast, involuntary movement is not. All motor behaviors lie within a range and have both components in different dimensions. It is important to keep the motor program updated by collecting information from local levels through afferent fibers. Interneurons are synapses that gather inputs from both higher centers and peripheral receptors. Afferent inputs to local interneurons bring information about muscle tension, joint movement, and other factors, which in turn stimulate movements. The human brain is not fixed. It is not like a machine that stays the same forever. It keeps changing based on our daily activities, developing neuroplasticity. If we remain in...