What will enclose the entire nerve trunk?
What is Epineurium
When someone has a painful sensation that is evoked by a stimulus that isn't normally painful
What is Allodynia
What cranial nerve is involved with innervating muscles within the eye to constrict the pupil and adjust the lens shape?
What is cranial nerve 3
This is how we sequence tasks and how we grade the physical components of a task
What is Motor Planning
What is a decrease in a response to a repeated, benign stimulus
What is Habituation
What detects touch, pressure, and vibration?
What are Pacinian Corpuscles
What consists of brain structures that process and regulate nociceptive information and can create pain perception in the absence of nociceptive input?
This half has axons that cross the midline in the optic chiasm and projects to contralateral visual cortex
What is the Nasal Half
Motor coordination is dependent on the changes in neural tissue that represents a memory, which is also known as...
What is an Engram
What is this window of time when the brain or specific areas are most sensitive to changes and more likely to demonstrate adaptations?
What is a Critical Period
What type of nerve primarily deals with the GTOs and spindles?
What are Large myelinated nerves (Ia, Ib)
What step in the process of pain perception occurs in the spinal cord via communication with descending pain modulation pathways?
What is Modulation (3rd step)
What theory of motor control crucially uses environmental information to choose what kind of movements we do?
What is the Ecological Theory
What neuroplasticity principle states that the training experience must be sufficiently salient to induce plasticity?
What is the "Salience Matters" Principle
What type of neuropathy has physical division of the nerves by excessive stretch or laceration?
What is it called when there is suppression of nociception that is activated by endorphins in response to stimulation that normally would be painful?
What is antinociception
If you are stopped at a light and the person next to you begins rolling forward, so you feel like you are moving forward and hit the brake, what is this an example of?
What is Optokinetic Nystagmus
This stage of learning is for skill refinement with decreased errors and a need for cognitive engagement
What is the Associative Stage
What neuroplasticity principle states that training that drives a specific brain function can lead to an enhancement of that function?
What is the "Use It and Improve It" principle
What disease presents with foot drop, steppage gait, muscle atrophy and frequent tripping?
What is Charcot-Marie-Tooth Disease
What is the syndrome of pain, vascular changes and atrophy that is worse in the distal extremity when there is an aberrant response to trauma?
Complex Regional Pain Syndrome
This disorder presents with an acute onset of vertigo and nystagmus
What is Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo (BPPV)
What type of practice condition occurs when practice time is greater than rest time?
What is Massed conditions
What is the neuroplasticity principle that uses plasticity in response to one training experience can enhance the acquisition of other behavior?
What is Transference