Relating brain function to cognitive-visuomotor integration performance in working-aged adults with persisting concussion symptoms
Lauren E. Sergio
IntroductionIn everyday life we interact with our environment in an indirect way, where there is a mapping between the viewed goal of our action and the required movement (e.g., using a computer mouse). Such tasks require cognitive- motor integration (CMI), where rules dictate the relationship between perception and action. Previous research with primarily young adult male athletes has demonstrated that the underlying movement and cognitive control networks that rely on intact frontal, parietal,
