“…There are specific unique roles associated with each sensory source (i.e., somatosensory, visual, vestibular) that cannot be compensated fully with each other [14,15]. The environment is experienced through sensory systems: exteroception (e.g., sight, Proprioception and Clinical Correlation DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.95866 hearing, touch), interoception (e.g., arousal, pain, visceral sensations, muscular sensations), and proprioception (e.g., sense of position, motion, and force), which all required for successful motor control [16,17]. During a task-oriented activity, motor adaptation, defined as a process of modifying the movement based on error feedback [18], skills are needed to cope with the changes occurring in the external and internal environment [2].…”