Besides, the suggestion that place should be found in the brain for something more and higher than sensori-motor activity, does not come from any necessity which has arisen in the course of scientific observation.
From this conclusion, it follows that a very large amount of the activity which we witness in the case of animals, often attributed to instinct, or even to voluntary determination, is to be described as sensori-motor activity.
We clearly recognize the laws of motor activity, including the full bearing of outward influences, and inward tendencies upon human action.
This is a phase of sensori-motor activity illustrating a law which has a wide range of application in animal life.
Another, akin to the mere joy in motor activity, is the love of manipulation, with which we began this whole discussion.
In fact, joy in motor activitymust be counted as one of the most general sources of play-satisfaction.
We have already interpreted pain as a phenomenon of motor activity.
Anger, fear, and grief are also strong excitants and, therefore, are stimuli to motor activity.
When pain does not lead to muscular activity it therefore frequently leads to crying or to moaning, just as tickling, which is equally an incentive to motor activity, results in laughter if it does not find full expression in action.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "motor activity" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.