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What makes a population atypical–priorities or constraints?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 February 2010
Abstract
Priorities for movement reflect constraints deriving from the motor system, task goals, and physical environment. Atypical and typical populations alike set and reset priorities in response to constraints, and they do so at many processing loci and time scales. Efforts to understand what is atypical about a population should focus first on the constraints it encounters.
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