HLSC 3410
Motor Control and Learning
Dr. Nicholas T. Antony
Email:
[email protected] Course Syllabus
Course is divided into lecture and laboratory components
• Lectures: Tuesday (5:10 – 8:00pm)
• Labs: Thursday and Friday (9:10 – 11:00am, 11:40 – 1:30 pm, 2:10 –
4:00pm)
5 individual labs
• Focus on clinical and research applications of lecture material
• 2 weeks to complete each laboratory
• Lab grade dependant on attendance and submission of a lab report
• Email TA to schedule alternate lab time for missed lab
Evaluation
Lab Completion (25%): 5 x 5% = 25% (Due at beginning of following lab)
Mid-term (30%): MARCH 8th, 2017
Assignment (20%): TBA (last week of semester)
Final Exam (35%): CUMMULATIVE (Exam date and time scheduled by Registrar)
Required Text
Richard Magill and David Anderson
Motor Control And Learning: Concepts
and Applications (11th edition)
ISBN: 1259823997
Course Description
Course aims to develop a critical approach to understanding
human movement
• Expands on principles of applied neuroscience established in HLSC
2400U: Introduction of Movement Neuroscience
• Introduces psychological and behavioural principles underlying
human motor control and learning
Course topics include:
o Classification and measurement of motor performance
o Role of sensory processes
o Memory and attention
o Feedback and Practice
Learning Outcomes
Further understanding of the neural and musculoskeletal systems and
their interaction to produce movement
Investigate the many theoretical approaches that drive motor control and
learning research
Study the contemporary theories on how the motor system produces
coordinated movement and skills
Evaluate how the human body acquires and retains learned motor skills
Discuss the methods for achieving maximum performance and retention
of skills
Lecture Outline
1. Introduction to motor skills and abilities
• What is motor control, learning, development
2. Skills, actions, movements and neuromotor processes
3. The classification of motor skills
• One-dimension classification systems
• Gentiles two-dimension taxonomy
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x5cdYuMRJ78
Part 1:
Introduction to Motor Skills and
Abilities
Introduction
Why Study Motor Learning?
We are born to move but learn to move skillfully
Skill is a biological imperative; without it, we would
quickly perish
o Skill is vital to our sense of control of the world around us
o We depend on our capacity to learn and perform motor skills
Humans are unrivaled in their capacity for acquiring skill
Introduction
Movement = Performance of Motor Skills
When people move they are engaged in the performance of a
type of human behaviour called motor skills
Motor skills are a product of skill acquisition through learning
• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MYW68cP55ak
• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_K_SR4P-Xx8
• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W2aZNnIdq5k
Clinical: loss of coordination and control of motor skills following
injury, disease and disability
Motor Control and Learning
Control vs. Learning
Both areas of study focus on the performance of motor
skills
Motor Skills: are activities or tasks that require
voluntary control over movements of the joints and
body segments to achieve a goal
Researchers study motor skills in many ways
Motor Learning
Motor learning involves the study of:
1. The acquisition of motor skills
2. The performance enhancement of learned or highly
experienced motor skills
3. The reacquisition of skills following injury and
disease
Clinical: What type of feedback can be given during
learning of a motor skill which will influence acquisition?
Motor Learning
Four characteristics of learning motor skills:
1. Process
o Set of events that lead to a specific outcome or change (skill acquisition)
2. Practice
o Skill development, or increased capability to perform a movement or action
3. Learning is inferred
o Based on observation
o Where does the “learning” occur?
4. Relatively Permanent
o Examples?
Motor learning is a set of processes associated with practice or experience
leading to relatively permanent changes in the capability for skilled movement
Motor Control
Motor control: involves the study of the
behavioural and neuromuscular mechanisms
which produce coordinated movement
While learning a new skill
While performing a well-learned skill
Clinical: What is the difference between
performing new and learned motor skills? How is
coordination altered by practice?
Motor Control
Levels of study and analysis:
a) Observational and Behavioural
• Relation between performance and environment
• Whether skill was performed accurately and efficiently
b) Biomechanical
• Mechanical and physical basis of movement
c) Neurophysiological and Neuroanatomical
• Central nervous system organization and control/coordination
of multiple muscles to produce complex (and simple) motor
outputs
• Role of sensory input
Motor Control
Why study motor control?
Goal to understand the affect of different variables on
motor performance
o Reaction, speed-accuracy trade-off, memory, attention,
feedback, force control, multi-task performance, automaticity,
arousal, stress, expert-novice
Research began to develop guidelines in physical
therapy and rehabilitation settings
o Important for physical therapists (Physiotherapy, Chiropractic,
Athletic Therapy and Occupational Therapy etc.)
Motor Development
Motor development involves the study of motor
behaviour from infancy to old age
• Issues related to both motor learning or motor
control
• Greater emphasis on growth and maturation
Clinical: How do the elderly compare with young
adults in navigating through a crowded hallway to
avoid collision with other people
Factors That Influence Motor Skill Learning and
Performance
Research assumes motor skills performance is
influenced by 3 factors:
1. The specific motor skill
2. The performance environment
3. The physical and psychological characteristics
of the person performing the skill
Factors That Influence Motor Skill Learning and
Performance
Part 2:
Skills, Actions, Movements and
Neuromotor Processes
Skills, Actions and Movements
Several terms are used in motor control and
learning research – skills, actions, movements
and neuromotor processes
What is a skill?
a) Tasks or activities that have specific goals to achieve
(action goals)
b) Require voluntary control over movements of the
joints and body segments (no reflexes)
Skill or Reflex?
Wink = Skill
Blink = Reflex
Winks and Blinks are similar movements
But…
Very different neural characteristics
Motor Skills
“Skill” also used as an indicator of quality of
performance
Characteristics of being ‘skilled’:
• Goal is achieved with maximum certainty
• Goal can be achieved under a wide range of
conditions
• Goal is achieved with minimum effort
Motor Skills vs. Cognitive skills
Evaluate motor vs. cognitive contributions
Cognitive:
o Outcome determined by cognitive component not motor
o May utilize motor skills; but they are not primary
o Decision making maximized
Performing calculus requires cognitive skill
Motor:
o Opposite!
o Motor control maximized, decision making minimized
Sidney Crosby is a highly skilled athlete
Motor Skills vs. Cognitive skills
Evaluate motor vs. cognitive contributions
Skills, Actions and Movements
Actions: Term often used synonymously with
the term “motor skills”
o Must be learned or relearned for goal to be achieved
Movements: Specific patterns of motion among
joints and body segments
o Movements are the component parts of motor skills
o Individual motor skills can be accomplished through
a variety of different movements
Skills, Actions and Movements
Movements and Actions - the relationship between can
described as:
Many-to-One: meaning a single action goal can be
accomplished by a number of different movements
• Going upstairs: one-leg at a time, two stairs at once etc.
One-to-Many: meaning one movement can be utilized in
a number of different action goals
• Jumping: high jump, hurdles, skipping, jump shot etc.
Skills, Actions and Movements
Neuromotor Processes: Are the neuroanatomical and
neurophysiological mechanisms of movement
• Involves the interaction between the central nervous system and
musculoskeletal system
Many-to-One: with a multitude of firing patterns and motor
recruitment strategies producing the same movements
One-to-Many: with similar muscle contractions used in
different types of movement
Skills, Actions and Movements
Why distinguish between neuromotor processes,
movements, skills/actions?
People initially learn to achieve action goals
People use a variety of movements to achieve the same action goal
People use a variety of neuromotor processes to perform the same
movement
Different measures are used to evaluate actions, movements, and
neuromotor processes
Part 3:
The Classification of Motor Skills
The Classification of Motor Skills
Why Classify Motor Skills?
The Classification of Motor Skills
Provides basis for identifying
similarities/differences among skills
Helps identify demands different skills place
on performer/learner
Provides basis for developing principles
related to performing and learning motor skills
Motor Skill Classification Systems
We will evaluate two classification groups:
1. 3 One-Dimensional Systems
2. Gentile’s Two-Dimensional Taxonomy
• Environmental context
• Function of the action
One-Dimensional Systems
Different classification methods:
1) Size of primary musculature involved in action
2) Specificity of where actions begin and end
3) Stability of the environmental context
1. Size of Involved Musculature
Two categories:
1. Gross motor skills - require the use of large
musculature to achieve the goal of the skill
• e.g. walking, jumping
2. Fine motor skills - require control of small
muscles to achieve the goal of the skill
• e.g. skills involving hand/eye coordination
1. Size of Involved Musculature
Is it OK to separate these terms as bluntly as suggested?
Many actions would fall under a continuum involving both
large and small muscle groups
Classification useful in research and rehabilitation
environments
2. Specificity of Beginning and End
Two main categories
1. Discrete motor skills - specified beginning and end points, usually
require a simple movement
• e.g. flipping a light switch
2. Continuous motor skills - arbitrary beginning and end points;
usually involve repetitive movements
• e.g. steering a car
Combination category: Serial motor skills
o Involve a continuous series of discrete skills
• e.g. shifting gears in a stick shift car
2. Specificity of Beginning and End
Continuum again…
Classification system especially prevalent in motor control research
• Distinctions between performance of discrete and continuous motor skills
3. Stability of the Environmental Context
“Environmental Context” is the physical
location / setting in which a skill is performed
3 specific features:
1. Supporting surface
2. Objects
3. Other people
3. Stability of the Environmental Context
Two main categories:
1. Closed motor skills – involve a stationary supporting surface,
object, and/or other people
• Self-paced: performer determines when to begin the action
• e.g. picking up a cup while seated at a table
2. Open motor skill – involve supporting surface, object, and/or
other people in motion
• Externally-paced: environmental features determine when to begin
the action
• e.g. catching a thrown ball
3. Stability of the Environmental Context
Closed Skills:
• Environment doesn’t change (predictable)
Open Skills:
• Environment in motion (change unpredictably)
Classification system popular in instructional and rehabilitation fields
Useful in research to infer demands placed upon individual
Gentile’s Two-Dimensional Taxonomy
Taxonomy: A classification system organized according to
relationships among the component characteristics of what is
being classified
One-dimensional classifications too limited in describing the
complexity of different motor skills
Gentile developed system considering two general
characteristics (Gentile, 2000)
1. Environmental context in which the person performs the skill
2. Function of the actions characterizing the skill
Developed for physical therapists to assess patient
movement problems and selecting appropriate exercises
Gentile’s Two-Dimensional Taxonomy
Function of the Action
Stability Transport
No Manipulation Manipulation No Manipulation Manipulation
Environmental Context
No
ITV 1A 1B 1C 1D
Stationary
ITV 2A 2B 2C 2D
No
ITV 3A 3B 3C 3D
In Motion
ITV 4A 4B 4C 4D
Gentile’s Two-Dimensional Taxonomy
Environmental Context
No inter-trial Sitting on your
variability favorite chair
Regulatory Conditions
Stationary
(closed skill) Inter-trial
High Jump
variability
Walking on a
No inter-trial treadmill:
variability constant speed
In-Motion
Inter-trial Hitting a
variability pitched ball
Gentile’s Two-Dimensional Taxonomy
Environmental context:
a) Regulatory conditions – features of environment* to
which movements must conform to for achievement
of the goal
• *Object, surfaces, other people
• Tool asks: Are the regulatory conditions stable or in motion
b) Non-regulatory conditions – features of environment
that have no or an indirect effect on movement
Gentile’s Two-Dimensional Taxonomy
Environmental context:
Regulatory conditions example: A drinking cup could
vary in size, shape, weight, texture, orientation,
position relative to performer
o Each variation requires modification of movement (or
underlying forces) to reach, grasp, manipulate the cup
c. Intertrial variability – occurs with variations in the
regulatory conditions from one trial to the next
Gentile’s Two-Dimensional Taxonomy
Function of the Action
Body Stability Body Transport
No Manipulation Manipulation No Manipulation Manipulation
Climbing
Writing at a across a Walking while
Handstand desk jungle gym texting on phone
Gentile’s Two-Dimensional Taxonomy
Function of the action:
a) Body stability – maintaining base of support in
one position
b) Body transport – changing the location of the
base of support
• Can occur on object (car, bike, skateboard, escalator)
• Requires active processing of change of position
relative to the surround
c) Manipulation – maintaining/changing position of
moveable objects
Gentile’s Two-Dimensional Taxonomy
Function of the Action
Stability Transport
No Manipulation Manipulation No Manipulation Manipulation
Environmental Context
No
ITV 1A 1B 1C 1D
Stationary
ITV 2A 2B 2C 2D
No
ITV 3A 3B 3C 3D
In Motion
ITV 4A 4B 4C 4D
Characteristics of Gentile’s Taxonomy
Each category puts different demands on the
performer
Skill complexity basis for taxonomy organization
o From simplest [#1A] diagonally to most complex [#4D]
Complexity increases when a motor skill involves one
or more of the following:
o Open environment
o Trial-to-trial variability
o Object manipulation
o Body transport
How would you classify this task?
How would you classify this task?
Characteristics of Gentile’s Taxonomy
Guide for evaluating motor performance
capabilities, limitations, and deficiencies
Systematic basis for selecting progressions of
functionally appropriate activities to
o increase performance capabilities
o overcome performance deficiencies
Chart person’s progress
o Develop an individual profile of competencies