This monograph is the twenty-sixth in the Somatic Cybernetics Technical Monograph Series, extending the series toward 30 monographs. It addresses physical degradation—the gradual reduction in movement precision, coordination stability, and force control when the body's physical systems operate beyond sustainable capacity. The work systematically establishes that the body can sustain physical activity only within certain limits; when demand exceeds execution capacity, movement quality declines. Degradation often begins with subtle changes rather than sudden failure: slight reduction in smoothness, small timing inconsistencies, minor coordination errors, and increased effort for familiar actions indicate increased demand. Force control may become less precise when approaching physical limits: inconsistent grip strength, uneven stepping pressure, and fluctuating lifting force occur because muscles and coordination systems must work harder to maintain control. Coordination stability may decrease as demand increases: irregular timing between movement phases, reduced synchronization between body segments, and increased variability in repeated actions reflect effort to maintain movement under strain. Movement efficiency may decline when capacity is exceeded: increased muscle activation to stabilize movement, more frequent corrective adjustments, and greater energy use for the same task accelerate fatigue and affect execution quality. Posture may shift to compensate when demand becomes high: changes in torso alignment, altered limb positioning, and weight distribution shifts help maintain stability but may indicate system compensation for increased load. Reaction speed may slow under high demand: slower balance corrections, delayed responses to environmental disturbances, and slower initiation of movement phases reflect increased effort to maintain coordination. Increased corrections may be required when execution quality declines: repeated posture adjustments, frequent weight shifts, and additional muscle activation to stabilize joints indicate the system is working harder to maintain functional movement. Recovery restores execution quality when intensity decreases or pauses occur, reducing fatigue, restoring muscle efficiency, stabilizing coordination patterns, and returning posture to balanced alignment. Understanding physical degradation helps explain how the body signals when its limits are being approached.
Kanna Amresh (Thu,) studied this question.