Each individual’s movements are sculpted by constant interactions between sensorimotor and sociocultural factors. A theoretical framework grounded in motor control mechanisms articulating how sociocultural and biological signals converge to shape movement is currently missing. Here, we propose a framework for the emerging field of
ethnokinesiology
aiming to provide a conceptual space and vocabulary to help bring together researchers at this intersection. We offer a first-level schema for generating and testing hypotheses about cultural differences in movement to bridge gaps between the rich observations of cross-cultural movement variations and neurophysiological and biomechanical accounts of movement. We explicitly dissociate two interacting feedback loops that determine culturally relevant movement: one governing
sensorimotor tasks
regulated by neural signals internal to the body, the other governing
ecological tasks
generated through actions in the environment producing ecological consequences. A key idea is the emergence of individual-specific and culturally influenced
motor concepts
in the nervous system, low-dimensional functional mappings between sensorimotor and ecological task spaces.
Motor accents
arise from perceived differences in
motor concept topologies
across cultural contexts. We apply the framework to three examples: speech, gait and grasp. Finally, we discuss how ethnokinesiological studies may inform personalized motor skill training and rehabilitation, and challenges moving forward.
This article is part of the theme issue ‘Minds in movement: embodied cognition in the age of artificial intelligence’.