#hand-coordination

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Running
fromThe Manual
2 days ago

I used a Hypershell "exoskeleton" to make my home workouts harder

The Hypershell is a carbon fiber exoskeleton that enhances walking and running capabilities, making workouts more challenging and effective.
#stroke
Medicine
fromWIRED
3 days ago

A New Implant Aims to Rewire Stroke Patients' Brains

Epia Neuro aims to help stroke patients regain hand function using a brain implant and motorized glove.
fromdesignboom | architecture & design magazine
5 days ago

body agency and the ways wearable devices let people regain control of their physical forms

Body agency is a power returned after an incident took it away from the user's physical form, and some wearable devices and technologies have this exact goal in mind.
Wearables
Running
fromiRunFar
2 days ago

Running and Aging: Finding Surprise Improvements

Crown King Scramble 50k offers a consistent and challenging course for runners, fostering a strong community and personal growth through endurance.
France news
fromJezebel
1 week ago

This is Why We Shouldn't Go on Runs

Strava's GPS tracking can inadvertently reveal sensitive military locations, as demonstrated by a French officer's run on the Charles de Gaulle aircraft carrier.
Chelsea
fromwww.bbc.com
1 week ago

Does running more in a game actually make a difference?

Chelsea's underperformance is not solely due to being outrun, as running data shows mixed results in predicting match outcomes.
Exercise
fromInsideHook
1 week ago

The Case for Becoming a "Movement Generalist"

Variety in physical activities can significantly lower mortality rates and enhance overall health.
London
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Cycling, crystals and cutting-edge science: the secrets of Hodgkinson and Hunter Bell's success

Keely Hodgkinson and Georgia Hunter Bell's success at the World Indoor Championships inspires hope for increased youth participation in athletics, especially among girls.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
2 weeks ago

Why Handwriting Is Better for Your Brain Than Typing

Handwriting activates motor, language, and attention systems more fully than typing, improving memory through deeper processing and supporting cognitive health.
Liverpool FC
fromwww.bbc.com
2 weeks ago

Lang to have surgery for 'serious' thumb injury

Galatasaray midfielder Noa Lang suffered a serious thumb cut during Liverpool's 4-0 Champions League victory and requires surgery in Liverpool, while teammate Victor Osimhen sustained a forearm fracture.
Snowboarding
fromUnofficial Networks
2 weeks ago

This Hand Drag Drill Belongs In Every Skier's Training Progression

Effective ski drills require isolating one movement element at a time, accepting temporary breakdown of other technique components to build genuine progress.
Women in technology
fromFuturism
2 weeks ago

This Video of a Humanoid Robot Playing Perfect Tennis Is Extremely Impressive

Chinese company Galbot developed software enabling a Unitree G1 humanoid robot to play tennis with sustained rallies, millisecond reactions, and precise ball striking against human opponents.
#brain-computer-interfaces
Medicine
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 weeks ago

Brain implant allows people who are paralyzed to type using their thoughts at speed of texting

Brain-computer interfaces now enable people with paralysis to type at 22 words per minute, approaching normal smartphone texting speeds.
fromPsychology Today
3 weeks ago

New Insights on the Evolution of Right- and Left-Handedness

The fighting hypothesis proposes that there is a so-called frequency-dependent maintenance of left-handedness. The main idea is that over the tens of thousands of years of human evolution, left-handers did have an advantage in fights due to a surprise effect. This gives them an evolutionary survival benefit since they win more fights.
Psychology
Medicine
fromenglish.elpais.com
2 weeks ago

Electrodes connected to the brain allow two people with paralysis to type with their minds

A brain-machine interface allows paralyzed patients to type on a keyboard using only their thoughts, achieving high-speed communication with minimal errors.
Wearables
fromWIRED
3 weeks ago

A Fitness Enthusiast's Guide to the Best Massage Gun in 2026

Modern massage guns combine percussive therapy with vibration, heat, cold, and LED light technologies to enhance muscle recovery and reduce post-workout pain through increased blood flow.
Snowboarding
fromUnofficial Networks
3 weeks ago

Can Cartilage Actually Grow Back? New Research Offers Hope For Skiers With Bad Knees

Researchers are developing injectable scaffolds and enzyme-blocking treatments that regenerate cartilage in animal models, though human trials remain pending.
#left-handedness
Women in technology
fromwww.independent.co.uk
4 weeks ago

Left-handers may have competitive advantage over right-handed people

Left-handed people demonstrate stronger competitiveness traits, which may provide a psychological advantage in competition and explain why left-handedness persists despite right-handers comprising 90% of the population.
Typography
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Left-Handers Are Better at Mirror-Writing Than Right-Handers

Left-handers demonstrate significantly faster and more accurate mirror-writing abilities compared to right-handers, supported by scientific research.
Women in technology
fromwww.independent.co.uk
4 weeks ago

Left-handers may have competitive advantage over right-handed people

Left-handed people demonstrate stronger competitiveness traits, which may provide a psychological advantage in competition and explain why left-handedness persists despite right-handers comprising 90% of the population.
Psychology
fromMail Online
1 month ago

'Lefties' are more competitive than right-handers, study finds

Left-handed people demonstrate higher competitiveness and stronger drive to win than right-handed individuals, potentially explaining the evolutionary persistence of left-handedness in human populations.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
3 weeks ago

Responding to Mistakes With a Flexible Mind

Mistakes are inevitable in sports and performance; psychological flexibility enables learning and continued improvement rather than dwelling on errors.
Exercise
fromScienceDaily
3 weeks ago

Scientists found a surprising way to make exercise work better

A ketogenic diet high in fat helps normalize blood sugar and dramatically improves muscle oxygen utilization and endurance response to exercise.
Running
fromiRunFar
3 weeks ago

Many Small Leaps for Runnerkind: Wondering About Non-Linear Improvement in Running

Runners experience breakthrough moments where performance suddenly improves, often after returning to regular training or during consistent improvement phases, driven by accumulated physiological adaptations.
fromInsideHook
1 month ago

Are You in Alignment? How to Unlock Pain-Free Movement.

The brain is the conductor of the orchestra, the muscles are the instruments. When your body is out of alignment, the orchestra is playing out of tune. Misalignment in the musculoskeletal system is frequently the root cause of chronic pain and the resulting poor posture.
Health
Bicycling
fromTheoldguybicycleblog
1 month ago

I Had Never Heard the Word "Neuroplasticity" - Until Yesterday

Mental framing through neuroplasticity—how you think about challenges—determines athletic capability more than physical training alone.
fromStrength Running
1 month ago

Cross Training and Running: How to Add Other Sports to Your Training - Strength Running

Cross training and running go together like peanut butter and jelly. If you build it into your schedule intentionally, strategically, and with a clear understanding of what you're trying to accomplish, you'll thrive. Megan makes the case that cross-training serves runners for several distinct reasons, and the right reason for you will shape how you approach it.
Running
Productivity
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Executive Function Myths That Need to Go

Executive function struggles do not reflect character or morality, and myths conflating the two harm personal growth and self-compassion.
Psychology
fromWIRED
4 weeks ago

Left-Handed People Are More Competitive, Says Science

Left-handedness persists at stable 10% rates due to frequency-dependent evolutionary advantages in competitive situations, where left-handers' unpredictability provides strategic benefits that disappear if they become too common.
Medicine
fromwww.npr.org
4 weeks ago

A neuroscientist heads to the Winter Paralympics

Sydney Peterson, a cross-country skier with dystonia, competes in the 2026 Winter Paralympics while pursuing a Ph.D. in neuroscience studying movement disorders.
Major League Baseball
fromBattery Power
1 month ago

Does having a sword make Chris Sale more likely or less likely to get injured?

Chris Sale received a custom-made sword as promotional gear, raising questions about sword specifications and whether such gifts might paradoxically protect injury-prone athletes.
fromSnowBrains
1 month ago

It's Time to Stop Debating & Start Putting the Bar Down - SnowBrains

I have evolved from someone who didn't think much of the bar except for resting my legs to thinking of it as an obvious life-saving precaution. Dr. Bourne shared several examples from Mammoth in which the bar could have saved lives, including the death of her former ski coach, who fell from a chairlift to his death, most likely from a medical event which may have been treatable.
Snowboarding
Mindfulness
fromFast Company
1 month ago

This Olympic skill can boost your job performance

Elite performers manage attention and energy to minimize "thoughtload"—the cognitive, emotional, and energy taxes that undermine performance—thereby improving execution under pressure.
fromThe Atlantic
1 month ago

What Pressure Does to an Athlete's Body

Those of us who watch the Olympics as bystanders tend to smugly judge athletes for succumbing to pressure without understanding what we even mean by the term. The first thing to know about pressure is that it has actual physical properties. Feeling it is not a sign of a too-thin veneer of character. Pressure might as well be a snakebite, given its very real qualities in the bloodstream and how it can paralyze even the strongest legs. The way to deal with pressure, and become
Science
Education
fromScience of Running
1 month ago

Training the Brain and Body: A discussion on the dynamics of physiology and neurology.

Effective coaching balances physiological and neurological understanding, values being 'good enough', emphasizes flexibility over rigid optimization, and tailors approaches to diverse athlete types.
Gadgets
fromMail Online
1 month ago

You're tying your shoelaces WRONG: Simple method takes one second

The Ian Knot ties shoelaces extremely quickly and efficiently, offering a symmetrical, secure alternative to traditional methods.
Wellness
fromScience of Running
5 months ago

Recovery Demystified: Focus on What Really Works

Prioritize simple recovery fundamentals—sleep, hydration, nutrition, and social support—and use advanced tools only to supplement, not replace, these basics.
Artificial intelligence
fromFast Company
1 month ago

This MIT grad built an AI tool to show how hard Olympic figure skating actually is

An AI sports-analytics tool measures athletes' jump heights, speeds, and rotations in real time to reveal the physical extremes behind Olympic performances.
Education
fromNature
2 months ago

How learning handwriting trains the brain: the science behind the cursive wars

Cursive penmanship is being reinstated in schools because pen-based letter production activates the brain more than typing, though cursive-specific benefits remain limited.
fromIndependent
2 months ago

'He thought that if it worked for a fighter pilot, it might work for a football player as well'

In 2017, Bjorn Mannsverk's phone rang. A year before, what was meant to be a special 100th anniversary for Bodo/Glimt ended in heartbreak as the Norwegian club were relegated from the top flight. A fresh approach was needed to get the club back on track. Having been stationed in Bodo before in his role as a fighter pilot with the Royal Norwegian Air Force, Mannsverk was familiar with the town, but not the football club.
Soccer (FIFA)
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 months ago

Heal your injuries faster using motion as the new potion

When you have an acute injury, your body is sending signals through the peripheral and central nervous systems and the immune system to say, hold on, I need to stop doing this so we can allow the tissue to heal, says Ericka Merriwether, a physical therapist and pain researcher at New York University. Rest, after all, is the first part of the familiar RICE therapy, which stands for rest, ice, compression and elevation.
Health
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

How to (and How Not to) Help People Who Are Blind

When I take a walk in my neighborhood, my white hair, dark glasses, and white cane shout to the world that I am an older blind man. Some passers-by assume that I am lost and ask if I need help. It is true that blind people sometimes need help when using a mobility aid (a white cane or guide dog) to navigate their physical environment. However, once a person becomes proficient at traveling with a mobility aid, they typically need much less help.
Social justice
National Basketball Association
fromDefector
2 months ago

The Health Of Darryn Peterson's Legs Remains A Mystery | Defector

Darryn Peterson's playing time is limited because of recurring lower-body injuries and family/coach decisions prioritizing his long-term health and NBA prospects.
US news
fromSlate Magazine
1 month ago

I Would Like to Request Funding to Study Pairs Figure Skaters' Brains

Pairs figure skating combines technical jumps, spins, and footwork with lifts, twists, throws, and death spirals for transcendent highs and dangerous falls.
US politics
fromwww.independent.co.uk
2 months ago

I need bigger gloves because my thumb is a big toe'

A Nottinghamshire cobbler lost his thumb in a workplace accident, replaced it with his toe, and reports only inconvenience is needing larger gloves.
Tech industry
fromwww.bbc.com
1 month ago

Get a grip: Robotics firms struggle to develop hands

Tendon-driven robotic hands with actuator-controlled fingers provide precise dexterity and serve as development kits to enable human-like manipulation in real-world environments.
fromWIRED
2 months ago

We Strapped on Exoskeletons and Raced. There's One Clear Winner

An exoskeleton is a relatively new class of wearable device designed to enhance, support, or assist human movement, strength, posture, or even physical activity. The main piece goes around your waist like a belt, and from it, a pair of hinged, mechanized splints extend down over the hips to strap onto each thigh, where they provide some robotic assistance to normal movements like walking, running, or squatting.
Science
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

How the Cerebellum Helps Words Flow From Your Brain

A right posterior cerebellar region partners with left-hemisphere language centers to support fluency, sharing neural mechanisms with physical coordination across hemispheres.
Wellness
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Motion is lotion': how to really look after your shoulders

Maintain shoulder mobility and strength by regularly using full range of motion, resetting posture hourly, and doing simple exercises to prevent stiffness and injury.
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

AI-Decoded Brain Signals May Help Paralyzed Regain Movement

Artificial intelligence (AI) machine learning is making a difference in assistive technology to help restore movement for the paralyzed. A new study in the American Institute of Physics journal APL Bioengineering shows how AI has the potential to restore lower-limb functions in those with severe spinal cord injuries (SCIs) by identifying patterns in brain signals captured noninvasively via electroencephalography (EEG).
Artificial intelligence
Soccer (FIFA)
fromThe Atlantic
2 months ago

Sometimes Athletes Just Get Lucky

Parental decisions feel decisive for athletic futures, though talent, practice, imperfect forecasting, measurement limits, and potentially luck all shape outcomes.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Seek Daily Improvement Instead of Perfect Performance

Perfectionism creates stress and pressure that degrades performance, and unrealistic expectations from coaches, parents, and peers harm young performers.
fromwww.npr.org
1 month ago

Olympic athletes push their bodies to the limit. Should we?

"We have a golden retriever, and so I walk her three or four miles a day, and I do a weight training class twice a week," says Brown, 62, of Arlington, Va. She knows muscle mass will decline without regular strength training. "We have a fun group with a personal trainer and we call ourselves the Beastie Girls," she says, describing how her group helps her stick with it. She also plays tennis and golf.
US news
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Four Strategies That Improve Pain and Athletic Performance

You feel an unpleasant sensation - like a sinking feeling of anxiety in your stomach as the game begins, and you think, "I'm anxious. Here we go again. I'm about to blow it." You feel your pain increasing, and the thoughts churn: "Great. I'll probably miss a whole week of work." Imagined catastrophes fill your mind. Manage these thoughts with the 3 C's: Catch it, Check it, and Change it.
Mindfulness
Health
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Bouncing back: from an ankle sprain to a shoulder pinch, experts on the best way to recover from common injuries

Address underlying imbalances with targeted, consistent movement, proper diagnosis and professional care; combine rest, sleep, nutrition and graduated training to prevent and recover from pain.
fromThe Atlantic
2 months ago

Your Muscles Remember Your Strongest Moments-And Your Weakest

In 2018, Sharples and his research lab, now at the Norwegian School of Sport Sciences in Oslo, were the first to show that exercise could change how our muscle-building genes work over the long term. The genes themselves don't change, but repeated periods of exertion turns certain genes on, spurring cells to build muscle mass more quickly than before. These epigenetic changes have a lasting effect: Your muscles remember these periods of strength and respond favorably in the future.
Science
fromiRunFar
1 month ago

Understanding and Improving Hip Efficiency, Part 1

For runners, the hips can be one of the most confounding and frustrating parts of the physiological puzzle for efficient movement. Every runner knows how crucial hip strength is - and how mobile hips are essential for both fast and pain-free running. Yet healthy, happy hips remain elusive. For many of us, our hips stay stiff no matter how much we massage and stretch them.
Exercise
Education
fromScience of Running
7 months ago

Exploring the New Era of Training: Embracing Experimentation

Systematic, thoughtful experimentation with new technologies and methods, balanced against proven traditions, optimizes training and pushes athletic performance boundaries.
Health
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Do the tiny, boring exercises: how to really look after your hips

Maintaining hip strength and mobility through targeted, multi-planar exercises prevents pain, reduces osteoarthritis risk, and supports healthy aging.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Clicking and Scrolling Our Way to Impaired Performance

Even thirty minutes of smartphone use can impair athletes' decision-making and training capacity, with larger effects depending on content, frequency, and individual vulnerabilities.
fromNature
1 month ago

Exercise rewires the brain - boosting the body's endurance

Betley and his colleagues were curious about what happens in the brain as people get stronger through exercise. They decided to focus on the ventromedial hypothalamus, a brain region that regulates appetite and blood sugar. The team then zeroed in on a group of neurons in that region that produce a protein called steroidogenic factor 1 (SF1), which is known to play a part in regulating metabolism. A previous study found that the deletion of the gene that codes for SF1 impairs endurance in mice.
Science
Running
fromiRunFar
2 months ago

Monitor the Iceberg: Subtle But Progressive Signs of Running Dysfunction

Running health lies on a continuum; early biomechanical dysfunctions reduce performance and lead to pain and injury unless subtle signs are identified and corrected.
Exercise
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Is it true that stretching before exercise prevents injury?

Dynamic stretching and sport-specific warm-ups enhance force production and control, while static stretching increases range but reduces muscle force by about 5%.
Psychology
fromBig Think
2 months ago

How training your gaze could help you master sports - and your own attention

Superior visual search strategies and eye-movement use distinguish some elite athletes from less-skilled players, enabling exceptional performance despite ordinary physical attributes.
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

It's such a complex little area': how to really look after your wrists

The wrist is such a complex little area, Evans says, as they have evolved to allow an extraordinary range of movement while also supporting a high level of fine motor control the wrists mean we have the capacity to do both handstands and neurosurgery. It's got eight little carpal bones they're the axis of the wrist and then you've got your radius and your ulna, which are your two forearm bones, and then that joins in with your hand bones, your metacarpals, Evans says.
Medicine
fromUnofficial Networks
1 month ago

The Future Of Boot Fitting Has Arrived

Rather than waiting until you arrive in a ski village or going out of your way to drive into the mountains, Boot Solutions is introducing a process in which you simply scan your feet and they do all the fitting remotely. Overall it seems pretty simple. You use the Boot Solutions app on on your phone to take a medical grade 3D scan of both feet and the company offers you plans from there.
Snowboarding
Health
fromSilicon Canals
2 months ago

Why your balance gets worse after 55 and the simple exercise that reverses it - Silicon Canals

Balance declines after 55 from inner-ear, vision, proprioception deterioration and muscle loss, but a simple exercise can significantly restore stability without equipment.
fromScience of Running
1 month ago

Fit and Fast: Achieving Robustness in Training

In this episode of the On Coaching Podcast, Steve Magness and Jon Marcus discuss the concept of 'fit but flat,' exploring the phenomenon where athletes excel in metabolic fitness but fail to perform competitively due to a lack of neuromuscular coordination. Using examples like middle-distance runner Ingram Brion, the hosts delve into how metabolic training alone can lead to race failures.
Running
Medicine
fromInsideHook
1 month ago

What Years of Typing and Texting Do to Your Hands

Frequent, prolonged typing and phone use can strain flexor tendons, increasing risk of carpal tunnel and other repetitive-use nerve injuries.
Science
fromNature
1 month ago

Daily briefing: Exercise rewires the brain for endurance, in mice

Repeated exercise sessions rewire the brain, making neurons faster to activate and enabling improved running endurance.
Health
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Do not ignore your body's signals': how to really look after your neck

Frequent micro-breaks, posture corrections, task variation, and raising screens to eye level reduce neck strain from prolonged sitting and device use.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Am I Left-Handed or Mixed-Handed?

Handedness exists in three forms: left, right, and mixed, with many individuals unaware of mixed-handedness and mixed-handedness measurable by questionnaires.
Medicine
fromScienceDaily
2 months ago

This discovery could let bones benefit from exercise without moving

A protein acts as an internal exercise sensor, converting movement into bone growth and enabling drugs to mimic exercise to prevent bone loss.
#dance-biomechanics
fromYanko Design - Modern Industrial Design News
1 month ago

3 Designers Built the Knee Recovery Tool 40% of Seniors Need - Yanko Design

There's something quietly radical about designing for pain. Not the dramatic, cinematic kind, but the daily grind of chronic discomfort that shapes how millions of people move through their lives. That's exactly what Madhav Binu, Kriti V, and Himvall Sindhu set out to tackle with Revive, a home-based rehabilitation device for knee osteoarthritis patients. The numbers tell a sobering story. Forty percent of India's elderly population lives with knee osteoarthritis, a condition that doesn't just hurt.
Medicine
Running
fromScience of Running
8 months ago

Keeping Training Fresh: Science, Methods, and Strategies

Consistent, simple, repetitive training actions over time build capacity and performance; coaches should emphasize small milestones, celebrate progress, and create environments valuing steady effort.
fromWIRED
1 month ago

AI, Fancy Footwear, and All the Other Gear Powering Olympic Bobsledding

Men's four-person bobsledding made its Olympic debut in Chamonix, France, in 1924; women's two-person bobsledding didn't enter the Games until 2002 in Salt Lake City. Women's monobob arrived in 2022. While the earliest bobsleds were made of wood, the sport has been synonymous with steel for years, although in recent decades it has been replaced by carbon fiber, which provides greater lightness and strength.
Science
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