specificity of practice Flashcards

1
Q

schmidt history

A

-previous beliefs concerning motor control and learning
-feedback contribution to motor control decreases as learning increases
-because of legs in rpcessing feedback, subjects would become less dependant upon feedback
-open loop system
modified position:
-recognized feedback might be used after all
-closed loop system

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2
Q

proteau history

A
  • determine whether with relatively extensive practice, as skill theoretically starts becoming open-loop, there would be evidence for a decreasing emphasis on visual feedback for motor control
  • proposition tested though aiming task
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3
Q

root mean square error

A

represents best overall measure of performance accuracy

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4
Q

RMSE

A
  • found that the movement became dependant on feedback with greater amounts of practice rather than less dependant
  • role of visual info from the environment and ongoing limb does not diminish as amount of practice increases
  • higher RMSE in the 2000 trial condition groups, suggests that it took more practice to use the visual feedback info more effectively
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5
Q

bootsma and wieringen history

A
  • some expert tennis players used visual info to modulate acceleration of their racket to adapt movement to ball trajectory
  • indicates that importance of visual feedback still exists even in highly trained individuals
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6
Q

specificity of practice

A
  • learning is most effective when practice sessions include environment and movement conditions which closely resemble those required during performance of the task
  • the learning process results in the creation of a representation of the task where all relevant info pertaining to the task is integrated
  • learning is specific to the conditions that prevail during acquisition
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7
Q

theory

A

hypothesis: at the base of motor learning is a sensorimotor representation that consists of integrated info from the central processes and sensory feedback derived from previous experiences on the movement task
testing hypothesis: prediction that for an aiming task, the addition of vision, after moderate and relatively extensive practice without vision, would lead to an increasingly large movement decrement, relative to appropriate controls

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8
Q

study supporting hypothesis

A
  • transfer test: groups performed under identical conditions from acquisition phases, although switching conditions
  • demonstrated that performance in transfer task suffered an increase in error due to the difference in conditions between acquisition phase and transfer test
  • adding a relevant source of movement control info to a task that was previously learned without that info present will result in: performance decrement, until the performer can integrate the new info into the existing store
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9
Q

primary study

A

subjects: 13 undergrad students, naïve to the experimental tasks and conditions
- magnitude of decrement related to the number of subjects, tasks, apparatus, and procedures related to the study

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10
Q

methods of study

A

task: displacement of a stylus by 80 cm in 550msec, 5-cm lateral displacement of the stylus towards the subjects body midline and a 35-cm vertical displacement of stylus
- subjects movement was mechanically perturbed during its course, purpose was make task more complex and therefore more learning to occur
- perturbation involved the introduction of a restive torque at shoulder, applied 225 msec post movement initiation, lasted for 150 msec

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11
Q

apparatus

A
  • 5 elements
    1. Defined start position
    2. Adjustable manipulation with a stylus at the er
    3. pre-assembled clutch-brake module
    4. Target to be reached
    5. An apple microcomputer
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12
Q

procedures

A

three conditions

  1. Vision of moving limb and target
  2. Vision of target only
  3. Control group- not given practice
    - all groups underwent a pre-test prior to the acquisition
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13
Q

acquisition phase

A

-total of 1,200 trials in six acquisition sessions- twice a day over the course of three days
transfer tests
-test 1: following first acquisition session (200 trials)
-test 2: at the end of acquisition phase (1,200 trials)

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14
Q

what was the activity

A
  • Online mouse accuracy game
  • 1st trials: lights on
  • 2nd trials: lights off
  • should notice a difference
  • 3rd trials: change target to small & lights on
  • 4th trials: small target & lights off
  • 2 conditions in activity:
    1. View of target and limb (T+L)
    2. View of target only (T only)
  • lights shut off to impair view of subject’s limbs
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15
Q

results: the acquisition phase

A

The acquisition phase

  • increase in accuracy from first 2 acquisition sessions to last 2 with the L+T outperforming T group in overall accuracy
  • negative correlation between error and practice in the acquisition phase of the experiment
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16
Q

results: acquisition vs transfer performance

A

acquisition vs transfer performance
temporal accuracy: subjects generally more accurate in the acquisition phase vs transfer phase
spatial accuracy:
L+T group: no increase in error when going from acquisition to transfer for
T-group: substantial increase of error was noted going from acquisition to transfer

17
Q

results: pre test vs transfer performance

A

temporal accuracy:
-only transfer 2 phase reached differential significance
-control group: most errors
-target: second erroneous
-target + limb group: least errors
Spatial accuracy:
-1st block of trials: largest error
-L+T group: increase in accuracy in transfer 2 test
T group: continuous increase in errors
control group: did not reach significance

18
Q

primary hypothesis

A
  1. primary hypothesis: specificity of learning hypothesis; learning is most effective when practice includes environment and movement conditions similar to those required during performance of the task
    - movement time: although the subjects were unable to complete their movement within a required temporal bandwidth, they did not truly develop a finer temporal representation of the movement
    - spatial accuracy: results supports the specificity of learning hypothesis
    - presentation of vision after 1200 trials produced an increase in error for T only group
    - increase in spatial error from pre-test to transfer 1 & 2
    - vision may have an interference effect may on pervious learning
19
Q

secondary hypothesis

A
  1. Secondary hypothesis: concerned either error found I performance when full vision is permitted and its relation to the amount of practice given without full vision
    - error found in task performance with full vision is independent of the amount of practice given without full vision
    - difference in trials rom transfer 1 to transfer 2 (1000 trials) was insufficient to solicit stimulus discrimination
    - ceiling effect reached at transfer 1
    - the sensory channels used for the evaluation of the movement outcome may also be specific to the practice conditions
    - vision in an aiming task requires practice with KR so that vision becomes integrated with other sources of sensory info as well as with info derived from central sources
    - for an aiming task, vision of environment and or limb cannot be substituted for by extensive practice
20
Q

current research

A

purpose: learning a sport skill is specific to the sources of afferent visual info available during learning
results: performance decrement in groups when tested at a visual condition that differed from what was experienced when learning the task

21
Q

conclusion of current research

A
  • if one of the sources of info used to learn the movement is withdrawn, the representation that has been developed becomes inefficient
  • withdrawing in visual in visual info causes significant deterioration in performance
  • the results reported do not, however, support out hypothesis of increased specificity as a function of learning. It might be the fact that the subjects were permitted to see where the stylus landed on the target area resulted in a ceiling effect that was already reached 200 trials of practice
  • at the present time both these interpretation are hypothetical and further work is recommended
22
Q

the theory

A

All about feedback sources: mostly visual
no vision vs with vision
people who did not have vision in acquisition transfer task error increased when they did have vision- performed decreased
Acquisition: practice
transfer: after testing