Jeffrey D. Konrad , Keith R. Lohse , Natasha Marrus , Catherine E. Lang
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Introduction
During practice, learners use available feedback from one trial to develop and implement motor commands for the next trial. Unsuccessful trials (i.e., “misses”) should be followed by different motor behavior (e.g., goal-directed changes and/or exploration of movement parameters), while successful trials (i.e., “hits”) should maintain the same behavior (e.g., minimize variance and recapitulate the same motor plan to the best of one's ability). Measuring the trial-to-trial changes in motor behavior can provide insights into how the motor system uses feedback and regulates movement variability while trying to improve performance. There have been no reports on the trial-to-trial motor behavior of typically developing children despite the profound motor development that occurs in this period and its relevance to long-term functional outcomes.
Methods
We recruited 72 typically developing children from ages 6 to 12 to perform a reinforcement learning beanbag toss to a target. Their target errors were used to examine their motor exploration and autocorrelation.
Results
Comparing variability at different trial-to-trial intervals showed that children exhibit motor exploration above and beyond the effect of sampling bias. Mean autocorrelations of different lags were near zero suggesting that successive trials were largely unrelated.
Conclusion
We found evidence that children utilize motor exploration in the target space of a target throwing task. After failed trials they exhibited increased variability to search for more optimal motor solutions. After successes, they minimized variability to create the same successful performance.
期刊介绍:
Human Movement Science provides a medium for publishing disciplinary and multidisciplinary studies on human movement. It brings together psychological, biomechanical and neurophysiological research on the control, organization and learning of human movement, including the perceptual support of movement. The overarching goal of the journal is to publish articles that help advance theoretical understanding of the control and organization of human movement, as well as changes therein as a function of development, learning and rehabilitation. The nature of the research reported may vary from fundamental theoretical or empirical studies to more applied studies in the fields of, for example, sport, dance and rehabilitation with the proviso that all studies have a distinct theoretical bearing. Also, reviews and meta-studies advancing the understanding of human movement are welcome.
These aims and scope imply that purely descriptive studies are not acceptable, while methodological articles are only acceptable if the methodology in question opens up new vistas in understanding the control and organization of human movement. The same holds for articles on exercise physiology, which in general are not supported, unless they speak to the control and organization of human movement. In general, it is required that the theoretical message of articles published in Human Movement Science is, to a certain extent, innovative and not dismissible as just "more of the same."