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Motor Control Theories

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Title: Motor Control Theories


1
Chapter 5
  • Motor Control Theories

Concept Theories about how we control
coordinated movement differ in terms of the roles
of central and environmental features of a
control system
2
Theory and Professional Practice
  • What is a theory?
  • Accurately describes a large class of
    observations
  • Make definite predictions about results of future
    observations (Hawking, 1996)
  • Theories of motor learning and control focus on
  • Explaining human movement behavior
  • Providing explanations about why people perform
    skills as they do
  • Does a theory have relevance to professional
    practice?
  • Provides the why basis for what practitioners
    do
  • See Figure 5.1

3
Motor Control Theory
  • Describes and explains how the nervous system
    produces coordinated movement of motor skill in a
    variety of environments
  • Two important terms
  • Coordination
  • The degrees of freedom problem

4
Coordination
  • Patterning of body and limb motions relative to
    the patterning of environmental objects and
    events (Turvey, 1990)
  • Two parts to consider
  • Movement pattern of a skill in relation to a
    specific point of time
  • Context of the environment of the head, body,
    and/or limb movements so the actions can be
    accomplished

5
Degrees of Freedom Problem
  • Degrees of freedom (df) Number of independent
    elements in a system and the ways each element
    can act
  • Degrees of freedom problem How to control the
    df to make a complex system act in a specific way
  • e.g. The control of a helicopters flight
    (described in the textbook)
  • Degree of freedom problem for the control of
    movement
  • How does the nervous system control the many df
    of muscles, limbs, and joints to enable a person
    to perform an action as intended?

6
Two General Types of Control Systems
  • Open- and Closed-Loop Control Systems
  • See Figure 5.3
  • Incorporated into all theories of motor control
  • Models of basic descriptions to show different
    ways the CNS and PNS initiate and control action
  • Each has a central control center (executive)
  • Function to generate and forward movement
    instructions to effectors (i.e., muscles)
  • Each includes movement instructions from control
    center to effectors
  • Content of the instructions differs between
    systems

7
Differences Between the Systems
  • Open-Loop
  • Does not use feedback
  • Control center provides all the information for
    effectors to carry out movement
  • Does not use feedback to continue and terminate
    movement

Movement instructions
Movement control center
Movement effectors
  • Closed-Loop
  • Uses feedback
  • Control center issues information to effectors
    sufficient only to initiate movement
  • Relies on feedback to continue and terminate
    movement

Movement instructions
Movement Control center
Movement effectors
8
Two Theories of Motor Control
  • Motor Program-based theory Memory-based
    mechanism that controls coordinated movement
  • Dynamic Pattern theory (a.k.a. Dynamical
    Systems) Describes and explains coordinated
    movement control by emphasizing the role of
    information in the environment and mechanical
    properties of the body and limbs

9
Motor Program-Based Theory
  • Best example comes from Schema Theory by
    Schmidt (1988)
  • Generalized motor program (GMP) Hypothesized
    memory-based mechanism responsible for adaptive
    and flexible qualities of human movement
  • Proposed that each GMP controls a class of
    actions that have common invariant characteristics

10
Motor Program-Based Theory, contd
  • GMP Function
  • To serve as the basis for generating movement
    instructions prior to and during the performance
    of an action
  • GMP Characteristics
  • Invariant features
  • Characteristics of the GMP that do not vary
    across performances of a skill within class of
    actions
  • The identifying signature of a GMP
  • Parameters
  • Specific movement features added to the invariant
    features to enable the performance of a skill in
    a specific situation
  • Characteristics can vary from one performance of
    a skill to another

11
Motor Program-Based Theory, contd
  • Invariant features and parameters
  • Example of an invariant feature
  • Relative time of the components of an action
    (i.e. of total time each component uses during
    performance)
  • Example of a parameter
  • Overall time (i.e.) for performing a skill
  • An Analogy from Music and Dance
  • Relative time Rhythm (beat) of the music, e.g.
    The 3 beats to a measure for a waltz
  • Overall time Tempo (The speed at which you
    waltz)
  • Regardless of how fast or slow you waltz, the
    rhythm remains the same (i.e. invariant)

12
GMP for Walking
  • Invariant
  • Relative time for gait cycle phases -
  • Parameter
  • Walking speed

13
Motor Program-Based Theory Testing Relative Time
Invariance
  • Experiment by Shapiro et al. (1981)
  • Used gait characteristics to test prediction of
    relative time invariance for a class of actions
    controlled by a GMP
  • Are walking and running one or two classes of
    action?
  • Assessed 4 components of 1 step cycle
  • Calculated relative time for each component at 9
    different speeds (3 12 km/hr)
  • Relative time of total time each component
    required for 1 step cycle
  • Results Relative time similar within speeds when
    walking but different from speeds when running
    (similar within speeds when running) See Figure
    5.5

14
Dynamic Pattern Theory (a.k.a., Dynamical
Systems)
  • Describes the control of coordinated movement
    that emphasizes the role of information in the
    environment and dynamic properties of the
    body/limbs
  • Began to influence views about motor control in
    early 1980s
  • Views the process of human motor control as a
    complex system that behaves like any complex
    biological or physical system
  • Concerned with identifying laws (natural and
    physical) that govern changes in human
    coordination patterns

15
Dynamic Pattern Theory Concepts
  • Motor control system operates on the basis of
    non-linear dynamics
  • Behavioral changes are not always continuous,
    linear progressions but often make sudden and
    abrupt changes
  • Behaviors specified by environmental and task
    characteristics/conditions
  • Behaviors are self-organized

16
Dynamic Pattern Theory Concepts Attractors
  • Attractor A stable state of the motor control
    system that leads to behavior according to
    preferred coordination patterns (e.g. walking)
  • Characteristics of an attractor
  • Identified by order parameters (e.g., relative
    phase)
  • Control parameters (e.g., speed) influence order
    parameters
  • Minimum trial-to-trial performance variability
  • Stability Retains present state despite
    perturbation
  • Energy efficient

17
Dynamic Pattern Theory Concepts Order and
Control Parameters
  • Order parameters
  • Also called collective variables
  • Functionally specific and abstract variables that
    define the overall behavior of the system
  • Enable a coordinated pattern of movement that can
    be reproduced and distinguished from other
    patterns
  • Relative phase is the most prominent of order
    parameters which represents the movement
    relationship between two movement segments (see
    chapter 2)

18
Order and Control Parameters, contd
  • Control parameter
  • A variable, when increased or decreased, will
    influence the stability and character of the
    order parameter
  • Is important to identify since it becomes the
    variable to manipulate in order to assess the
    stability of the order parameter
  • Provides the basis for determining attractor
    states for patterns of limb movement

19
Dynamic Pattern Theory Concepts Self-Organization
  • Self-Organization
  • When certain conditions characterize a situation,
    a specific pattern of limb movement emerges
  • This pattern of movement self-organizes within
    the characteristic of environmental conditions
    and limb dynamics

20
Attractors and Self-Organization for Movement
Coordination
  • Gait Transitions
  • Research (to be discussed more in ch. 7) shows
    that if a person begins walking on treadmill at
    slow speed
  • Treadmill speed increases every few minutes
  • Person begins to run at a certain speed not same
    speed for all people
  • Same effect if person begins running on treadmill
    - Begins to walk at certain speed
  • Swim Stroke Transitions
  • Research in France (2004)
  • 14 elite male swimmers
  • Each trial involved a swim velocity increase
    began at preferred velocity
  • Arm-stroke analysis showed 2 distinct arm
    movement coordination modes
  • Began in one mode but abruptly began 2nd mode at
    a specific swim velocity

21
Attractors and Self-Organization for Movement
Coordination, contd
  • Discuss how the two research examples on the
    previous slide demonstrate the dynamic pattern
    theory concepts of
  • Self-organization
  • Control parameter
  • Attractors (i.e., stable coordination states)
  • Non-linear behavior change

22
Dynamic Pattern Theory Concepts Coordinative
Structures
  • Functional synergies (i.e. cooperative groups) of
    muscles and joints that act cooperatively to
    produce an action
  • If a perturbation stops one set of muscles from
    working, another works in its place
  • e.g. walking with a leg cast
  • Develop through practice, experience, or naturally

23
Dynamic Pattern Theory Concepts Perception and
Action Coupling
  • The linking together (i.e. coupling) of movement
    to environmental information
  • The perception part
  • The detection of critical invariant information
    in the environment
  • The action part
  • The movement that becomes associated with what is
    specified by the environmental information
  • An example
  • When walking, the time to contact an object in
    your pathway (specified by the perception of the
    changing size of the object) determines when you
    initiate stepping over the object
  • i.e. Your stepping action is coupled with your
    visual perception of the object

24
Present State of the Control Theory Issue
  • Currently, both the motor program-based theory
    and dynamic pattern theory predominate
  • Research investigating each has shown that a
    theory of motor control cannot focus exclusively
    on movement information specified by the CNS
  • Task and environmental characteristics must be
    also be taken into account
  • Speculation exists that a hybrid of the two
    theories as a compromise theory could emerge to
    explain the control of coordinated movement
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