Lecture 2 Flashcards

1
Q

origins of a field of study

A

1.Neurophysiology
-neural processes involved in movement
2. Psychology
-branch of this discipline concerned with high level skill
Pre 1970
-these two branches functioned separately
-in 1970, began to come together into one academic discipline

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2
Q

Sherrington

A
  1. Sherrington (19th century)
    - classified major responses to stimuli presented to the extremities (fundamental reflexes)
    - credited with the creation of several concepts of motor control (reciprocal innervation)
    - credited with the term “final common path” (the final set of commands delivered to muscles)
    - early research of the perception of movement (coined the now common term: proprioception)
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3
Q

Bernstein

A
  1. Bernstein (1920-30s)
    - Russia- published work in obscurity
    - movement is goal directed and active
    - in 1967 works were translated in North America- wider audience
    - known for the “degrees of freedom” problem: that our motor system has many independent paths and parts, they are done unconsciously ex) scissors have 1 degree of freedom, move in 1 way
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4
Q

Esther Thelen

A
  1. Esther Thelen
    - reflexes emerged and remerged at various points during development
    - proposed that reflexes are the results of a complex interaction between the sensory motor systems and the environment
    - recognized that cognition as part of a complex system of interactions
    - relates to Kelso’s (1995) dynamical systems theory (coordination of movement)
    - thought more broadly about the development of motor skills and incorporated perception-action work into her perspective
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5
Q

Paul Fitts

A
  1. Paul Fitt’s
    - posited one of the better-known laws in ML&C research- Fitts Law (1954)
    - speed-accuracy trade off
    - demonstrated in a tapping task
    - has been applied to different aspects of equipment design
    - research in the spatial capability of work-space displays and controls used has influenced the field of ergonomics
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6
Q

Bernstein’s degrees of freedom

A
  1. Early leaners- focus on essential body parts for a given movement ex) kicking a ball (standing still and just kick)
  2. Skilled learners- learn to exploit degrees of freedom ex) throwing a baseball (follow through, weight transfer, max force production)
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7
Q

3 stages of learning

A
  1. early/cognitive phase
  2. intermediate/associative phase
  3. autonomous phase
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8
Q

stages of learning: how it works

A
  • sequences of motor movement have a restricted course: initial pattern (blue print) is required
  • to complete a motor task effectively: degrees of freedom= early (limit) & differentiation (maximize)
  • practice =automaticity: initial patterns become “fixed”: integrated into related movements
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9
Q

early/cognitive phase

A
  1. early/cognitive phase:
    - must attend to cues, events, and responses while learning
    - kinesthetic cues, visual cues, rhythmic cues
    - instructions and demonstration matter
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10
Q

intermediate/associative phase

A
  1. Intermediate/associate phase:
    - this phase lasts for varying durations of time
    - dependant on complexity of skill & number of patterns incorporated
    - efficiency is the goal
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11
Q

autonomous phase

A
  1. Autonomous phase:
    - Patterns of movement are more automatic
    - performance is maintained despite interference/distraction of other skills
    - in this phase of leaning: too much verbal cuing can cause distraction= decreased performance BUT learning can still occur
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