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dr. John Stins


Assistant Professor, Faculty of Behavioural and Movement Sciences, Prevention and Rehabilitation

Assistant Professor, IBBA

Assistant Professor, Amsterdam Movement Sciences, AMS - Musculoskeletal Health

Assistant Professor, Amsterdam Movement Sciences, AMS - Sports

Research

I study how cognition, emotion, personality, and psychopathology impact the organization of movement, with an emphasis on regulating balance.

Research interests 

1) Influences of emotion on balance

Charles Darwin recognized that emotions have clear communicative and behavioral characteristics, such as preparing the body for fight or flight. These innate tendencies manifest themselves in postural changes, such as ‘freeze’ and ‘avoidance’. Using recordings of the body center of pressure, I study how static balance and the initiation of gait are influenced by affective states, induced by pictorial stimuli.

2) Cognitive regulation of balance

Are postural tasks under ‘automatic’ control, or do cognitive states have an additional (causal) effect on the online regulation of balance? I am involved in experiments that study whether working memory, mental fatigue, and attentional load influence parameters of the body center of pressure.

 

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dr. John Stins

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