Abstract
This article continues the exploration of the usefulness of the techniques of biomechanics to understand the processes of motor development and emerging motor control. In response to commentaries on Jensen (this issue), we reiterate the importance of theory in shaping developmental hypotheses while acknowledging the divergence of opinion on the relative merits of specific biomechanical analyses. Emerging from these discussions is a consensus on the power of the techniques of biomechanics to provide more than mere description and to illuminate mechanisms of developmental change. Copyright # 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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