1 / 18

Principles of Motor Learning

Principles of Motor Learning . Movement studies 2011. Slides adapted from 2010 produced by SP. Learning Outcomes. Following this session and appropriate independent study the student should be able to: Define the term of Motor Learning

ossie
Télécharger la présentation

Principles of Motor Learning

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Principles of Motor Learning Movement studies 2011 University of Hertfordshire MS - 2011/12 Slides adapted from 2010 produced by SP

  2. Learning Outcomes Following this session and appropriate independent study the student should be able to: • Define the term of Motor Learning • Acquire awareness of the basic characteristics and attributes of Motor Learning • List the stages that are involved in the successful undertaking and completion of a simple task, and briefly discuss the components/key features that may be involved • Acquire awareness of the basic practice conditions that may be employed to facilitate Motor Learning University of Hertfordshire MS - 2011/12

  3. Motor Learning • Broadly 2 types of movement: Reflex & Learnt • Motor learning primarily relates to LearnedMvts • Learning is the process of acquiring knowledge. • Motor learning is the acquisition or reacquisition of movement • Motor learning emerges from a complex of perception, cognition and action processes, and from the interaction of the individual, the task and the environment University of Hertfordshire MS - 2011/12

  4. MOVEMENT • T • Task I Individual E Environment M Figure adapted from Shumway-Cook and Wollacott, 2001;pp2 University of Hertfordshire MS - 2011/12

  5. Motor Learning • “Motor learning is a set of processes associated with practice or experience leading to relatively permanent changes in the capability for movement” (Schmidt and Lee, 1999:pp264) • This definition is synthesized by four distinctive characteristics of what is termed as “learning”: • (1) it is the process of acquiring the capability for the production of skilled actions • (2) it is the direct product of practice or experience • (3) it cannot be observed directly • (4) it is relatively permanent University of Hertfordshire MS - 2011/12

  6. Stages of a Task • Idea • Planning • Execution • Evaluation • Task • Individual • Environment • Past Experience • During • End University of Hertfordshire MS - 2011/12

  7. Stages of motor learning • In the early phase motor patterns are unskilled, feedback dependent& there is high demand of cognitive attention. • With practice, accuracy & velocity of actions increase, whereas feedback processing becomes less important & move towards expertise • Initial stage • Slow performance under close sensory guidance, irregular shape of movements, variable time of performance • Memory & movement pattern transfers • Trial and error • Intermediate stage • Gradual learning of the sensory-motor map, increase in speed & success • Advanced stage • Rapid, automated, skillful performance, isochronous movements, whole field sensory control University of Hertfordshire MS - 2011/12

  8. Consider this! • To become an expert on a skill, 10000hrs of practice are required • If one practices for 5h/day for a whole year, then: 5 X 365 = 1825hrs • To achieve 10000h, one needs to practice at the same rate (5hrs/day) for ~5.5 years!!! • How often and for how long do we see our patients??? University of Hertfordshire MS - 2011/12

  9. Amount of Practice • The amount of practice a person devotes to a skill is important in learning a motor skill. • More practice is assumed to be better than less practice. • The amount of practice is not the sole critical variable influencing motor skill acquisition • “Practice does not make perfect; perfect practice makes prefect performance.” University of Hertfordshire MS - 2011/12

  10. Task 1 • Write your name or signature with your non-dominant hand. • Do this 20 times, and see how your writing is improving. • Compare the first with your last trial. University of Hertfordshire MS - 2011/12

  11. How to prescribe Practice • How to use an allotted amount of time within and between practice sessions? • Massed (rest between sessions small or none) • Distributed (rest between sessions longer) • Is it better to have longer (mass) practices than shorter (distributive) more frequent practices ??? University of Hertfordshire MS - 2011/12

  12. Distribution of Practice • Effects on performance • The longer the rest period the better the performance • Effects on learning • The longer the rest period the better the learning • Time trade-off: • Massed: reduced benefits per time in training, but requires the least total time VS. • Distributed: results in the most learning per time in training, but requires the most total time to complete University of Hertfordshire MS - 2011/12

  13. Blocked Vs. Random Practice • Blocked: a sequence in which all trials on one task are done together • Random: the same task is never repeated on consecutive trials • Same number of trials, but different order. • Evidence suggests that practicing a number of tasks in a randomized order is the most successful means of achieving stable learning and retention. University of Hertfordshire MS - 2011/12

  14. Part Vs. Whole Practice • Closed VS. Open skill practice • Breaking a motor skill down into smaller parts • Success of part or whole practice depends on the task • Serial tasks: practicing difficult parts separately. Allows considerable transfer of the part to the whole task – backward chaining • Continuous tasks: usually involve coordination so part practice, does not transfer to the whole task – e.g. Walking TO……. Clutch/throttle control & Steering a car University of Hertfordshire MS - 2011/12

  15. Augmented Feedback • Intrinsic • Results from the learner (vision, proprioception, cognitive processes) • Extrinsic • Results from an outside source (physio, coach etc) • Feedback important for learning (especially during early stages) but can cause dependency University of Hertfordshire MS - 2011/12

  16. Task 2 • In your groups of four, have three people look at an image for 30 secs • Then: • One person will try to copy the image • The second person will copy the image whilst being blindfolded, but someone will be giving feedback. • The third person will do the same but whilst being blindfolded. NO CHEATING!!! University of Hertfordshire MS - 2011/12

  17. Review the images • So what did we find out? • Relate this to motor learning and in particular intrinsic, extrinsic & no feedback • Dependency ??? University of Hertfordshire MS - 2011/12

  18. ANY QUESTIONS ?? Thank you for listening & participating University of Hertfordshire MS - 2011/12

More Related