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Lynne Dart Carolyn Taylor Candace Skinner Presentation Outline Introduction Classifying skills Theories of motor learning Goal setting Motor learning v. motor ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Lynne%20Dart


1
  • Motor Learning
  • Lynne Dart
  • Carolyn Taylor
  • Candace Skinner

2
Presentation Outline
  • Introduction
  • Classifying skills
  • Theories of motor learning
  • Goal setting
  • Motor learning v. motor performance
  • Individual and performance characteristics of
    skill learning
  • Presenting and practicing a skill
  • Transfer of Learning
  • Feedback
  • Stroke and Motor Learning
  • GAME!!!!

3
Introduction
  • Motor skills are an important part of our
    existence as human beings. Therefore, the focus
    of our presentation is to look at how
    individuals develop and perform motor skills by
    applying the principles of motor learning.
  • Motor Learning is a set of cognitive processes
    associated with practice, training, or experience
    that results in relatively permanent changes in
    motor behavior

4
Classifying Skills
  • Skills Can Be Classified By Task
  • Discrete Skill
  • a skill that has a well defined beginning and
    end.
  • Serial Skill
  • Characterized by several discrete skills
    connected in a sequence, whereby order is often
    crucial
  • Continuous Skill
  • A skill that has no identifiable beginning or end
    and can often be repetitive.
  • Skills Can Also Be Classified By Cognitive and
    Motor Elements
  • Motor Skill
  • A skill determined by the quality of a
    performers movements
  • Cognitive Skill
  • A skill for which the primary determinant of
    success is the quality of the performers
    decisions regarding what to do.

5
Classifying Skills cont
  • Open Skill
  • A skill performed in an environment that is
    unpredictable or in motion that requires
    individuals to adapt their movements in response
    to dynamic properties of the environment.
  • Closed Skill
  • A skill performed in an environment that is
    predictable or stationary and that allows
    individuals to plan their movements in advance.

6
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7
Theories of Motor Learning
  • Fitts and Posner (1967)
  • Cognitive Stage Trial and error, directs
    attention to movements
  • Associative reduces amount of cognitive activity
    involved, improvement in success and consistency
  • Autonomous Skill is becoming automatic, little
    cognitive attention

8
Theories of Motor Learning
  • Gentiles Model
  • Initial Stage
  • develop a movement coordination pattern for
    successful performance,
  • learn to discriminate regulatory and
    non-regulatory conditions
  • Later Stages
  • Adapt movement patterns to specific demands of
    any performance situation
  • Perform skill with economy of effort
  • Closed skills require fixation and open skills
    require diversification

9
Goal Setting
  • Individuals should have an input in the
    goal-setting process.
  • Goal setting guides the progress of therapy.
  • Goals should be specific, measurable, attainable,
    realistic and time oriented.
  • Three types of goal should be set performance
    goals, process goals and outcome goals.

10
Motor Learning Vs. Motor Performance
  • Motor Performance
  • Observable attempt voluntary action.
  • Level of performance is susceptible to
    fluctuation in temporary factors such as
    motivation, arousal, fatigue, and physical
    condition
  • Motor Learning
  • Changes in internal processes that determine an
    individuals capability of producing a motor
    task.
  • The level of motor learning improves with
    practice and is often inferred by observing
    relatively stable levels of motor performance.

11
Individual Characteristics that Affect Motor
Learning
  • Abilities
  • Attitudes
  • Motivational level
  • Previous social experiences
  • Prior movement experiences

12
Performance Characteristics of Skill Learning
  • Improvement
  • Consistency
  • Stability
  • Persistence
  • Adaptability

13
Presenting a Skill
  • Demonstration
  • Very little research
  • Modeling Use of demo to convey information about
    how to perform a skill, same as observational
    learning
  • Beneficial when the skill being learned requires
    the acquisition of a new pattern of coordination
  • Demonstrator needs to perform skill correctly

14
Demonstration Contd
  • Observing unskilled demonstrators can be useful
    if learner is unaware they are unskilled
  • Useful only if model and demonstrator are both
    beginners

15
How frequently should you demonstrate a skill?
  • Should be demonstrated before beginner attempts
    skill
  • During early part of learning, skill should be
    demonstrated as often as necessary
  • As skill progresses, learner should not need
    demonstration as frequently

16
Cognitive Mediation Theory
  • Explains benefit of a demonstration
  • Learner observes skilled model
  • Learner translates the observed movement
    information into cognitive code
  • Learner stores cognitive codes in memory and uses
    them when they perform the skill

17
Verbal Instructions and Cues
  • Evidence supports this method of instruction
  • Must consider that learner has limited attention
    capacity
  • Beginner may have difficulty paying attention to
    more than 1 or 2 instructions at a time

18
Verbal Instructions Contd
  • Direct learners focus to features of skill or
    environment that will enhance performance
  • Performance of open skills requires direction of
    attention to aspects of the environment that will
    help learner
  • Learners frequently attend to environmental cues
    without conscious awareness

19
Verbal Cues
  • Verbal instructions may be too short or too long
  • They may provide too much or too little
    information
  • May not provide learner with information they
    need to perform the skill

20
Verbal Cues
  • Short concise phrases
  • Direct attention to information relevant to
    performing skills
  • Prompt key movement-pattern elements of
    performing skills
  • Cues are effective in facilitating learning new
    skills as well as performing well-learned skills

21
When to give verbal instruction
  • Verbal cues can be given at the same time as a
    demonstration
  • Can be given to help learners focus on critical
    parts of skills
  • Learners can also use verbal cues themselves when
    performing a skill

22
How do you practice a skill?
  • Whole vs. part
  • Mass vs. Distributed practice
  • Speed/accuracy tradeoff
  • Transfer positive and negative

23
Whole vs. Part
  • Low in complexity and high in organization (i.e.
    whole practice)
  • Eg. Buttoning a button, throwing a dart
  • High in complexity and low in organization (i.e.
    part practice)
  • Eg. Serving a tennis ball, reaching for, grasping
    and drinking from a cup, driving a stick shift

24
Practicing Parts of a Skill
  • Wightman and Lintern (1985) classified three
    part-task strategies
  • Fractionization
  • Segmentation
  • Simplification

25
Speed/Accuracy Trade-off
  • Characteristic of motor skill performance in
    which the speed at which the skill is performed
    is influenced by movement accuracy demands
  • When the person emphasizes speed, accuracy is
    reduced
  • When the person emphasizes accuracy, speed is
    reduced

26
Practice Mass vs Distributed
  • Massed practice
  • a practice schedule in which the amount of rest
    between practice sessions or trials is very short
  • Distributed practice
  • a practice schedule in which the amount of rest
    between practice sessions or trials is relatively
    long
  • Baddely and Longman (1978) Postal Workers on a
    mail-sorting machine
  • Shea et al. (2000) continuous dynamic balance
    tasks and discrete key-press timing

27
Transfer of Learning
  • the influence of having previously practiced or
    performed a skill or skills on the learning of a
    new skill
  • Positive transfer beneficial effect of previous
    experience on the learning or performing of a new
    skill, or on the performance of a skill in a new
    context
  • Negative transfer negative effect of prior
    experience on the performance of a skill so that
    a person performs the skill less well than he or
    she would have without prior experience
  • Bilateral transfer transfer of learning that
    occurs between limbs

28
Why does transfer occur?
  • Positive 2 prominent hypotheses
  • Transfer occurs because the components of the
    skills and/or the context is the same
  • Transfer occurs because of similarities between
    the amounts and types of learning processes
    required
  • Similarity of cognitive processes required

29
Why does transfer occur?
  • Negative an old stimulus requires a new but
    similar response
  • Environmental context characteristics of two
    performance situations are similar but the
    movement characteristics are different
  • Change in spatial locations of a movement ie
    drive a car different than your own
  • Change in the timing structure of the movement ie
    dance

30
Clinical Implications
  • Determine method based on skill complexity
  • ie whole vs part
  • Distribute therapy sessions, encourage practice
    sessions throughout the day and week, discourage
    mass practice before a therapy session
  • Demonstrate the skill several times before your
    client attempts

31
Clinical Implications Contd
  • Verbal instructions should be short, and the
    skill broken down
  • Use verbal cues that are short, direct attention
    and prompt key components
  • Encourage transfer of skills by mixing it up!
  • Practice with unimpaired limb during initial
    training especially right after surgery

32
Food For Thought
  • An occupational therapist is frustrated and
    confused. Her job is to oversee therapy for a
    number of stroke patients, who are trying to
    recover their functional abilities. The therapist
    wants to provide as much assistance as possible,
    but given the number of patients she must work
    with and working in an acute setting, she is
    unable to provide a lot of feedback to any
    particular individual. As a result, the
    therapists patients must spend most of the time
    practicing on their own.

33
Feedback
  • Questions We Need to Consider
  • How and when should an occupational therapist
    provide feedback for patients?
  • What kinds of information should be conveyed to
    them about their performance?
  • Should the therapist attempt to provide feedback
    about more then one aspect of a patients
    movement at a time?
  • When assisting a particular individual, should
    the therapist give feedback after each
    performance attempt or wait until after the
    person makes several attempts before providing
    feedback?

34
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35
Knowledge of Results
  • It is extrinsic, verbal information that tells
    learners about the success of their actions with
    respect to the intended goal.
  • This form of feedback is often a repetition of
    intrinsic feedback.
  • Extrinsic feedback is essential when a persons
    intrinsic feedback sources are diminished or
    distorted, as in the case of some patients who
    suffer from neurological impairments.

36
Knowledge of Performance
  • It provides performers with information about the
    pattern of their movement.
  • It focuses on the quality of the produced
    movement.
  • Very important for every day tasks

37
Benefits of Feedback
  • Provides Motivation for Clients
  • It provides reinforcement for an action
  • Information for learners so that they may perform
    an action more effectively.
  • BUT.It can create dependency in the client.

38
WHEN DO WE PROVIDE FEEDBACK ?
  • Whether to provide feedback at all?
  • What information do we provide?
  • How much information is necessary?
  • How precise should that information be?
  • How often should we provide feedback?

39
Whether to provide feedback at all?
  • Clients can pick up many forms of sensory
    information.
  • There is a hierarchy of intrinsic information
    that an individual must be aware of to produce an
    effective movement, therefore it is important
    when providing instructional feedback that we
    ensure that the individual becomes in tune with
    that information.
  • Also, important to look at what the individual
    must learn before they decide whether or not to
    provide feedback.

40
What information do we provide?
  • Program feedback
  • This is error information about the fundamental
    movement pattern.
  • Parameter feedback-
  • This form of feedback provides a person with
    error information about the parameter values
    (e.g. amplitude, speed, force).
  • Visual feedback
  • Videos can also be used to give a person visual
    feedback as opposed to verbal.
  • Descriptive feedback-
  • It describes the errors an individual makes
    during the performance of a skill.
  • Prescriptive feedback-
  • This form of feedback describes errors made
    during the performance of a skill and suggests
    something the learner might do to correct it.

41
How much information is necessary?
  • Summary feedback
  • It is given after a series of performance
    attempts that provides the learner with
    information about each of the attempts in the
    series. The number of performance attempts a
    practitioner should summarize in a feedback
    statement depends on the complexity of the task.
  • Average feedback
  • Feedback that is given after a series of practice
    attempts that provides learners with information
    about their average performance in the series.
  • Both of these methods are a good way to block
    dependency on feedback

42
How precise should that information be?
  • Early in practice, errors are so large that
    precise information about the size of the error
    does not matter, but with time more precise
    feedback is better as the individual progresses
    in treatment.
  • Bandwidth feedback
  • The instructor will only provide feedback when an
    individuals movement falls outside an acceptable
    range of correctness or bandwidth.

43
How often should we provide feedback?
  • Absolute feedback frequency
  • The total number of feedback presentations given
    for a series of performance attempts
  • Relative feedback frequency
  • The proportion of performance attempts for which
    feedback is given equal to absolute feedback
    frequency divided by the number of performance
    attempts and multiplied by 100.
  • Faded feedback
  • An approach that uses a schedule for providing
    extrinsic feedback in which relative frequency of
    feedback is high during initial performance
    attempts and it diminishes during later learning.
    Feedback can be adjusted to the proficiency rate
    and improvement of each learner.

44
Stroke and Motor Learning
  • Stroke is the most important single cause of
    disability of people living in their homes
  • An important goal in management of stroke is
    rehabilitation
  • Rehabilitation should start within 48 hours if
    client is medically stable
  • What is effective rehabilitation?

45
Stroke and Motor Learning
  • Need to teach clients how to perform tasks using
    spared motor functions
  • Client will most likely have to learn how to
    perform the task differently then they performed
    it pre-stroke
  • Role of motor learning in stroke rehab has not
    been extensively studied

46
Stroke Literature Hanlon
  • Retention and transference varies as a function
    of training style or practice schedule
  • If retention is goal, it is important to teach
    distributed practice (Intersperse activity with
    other tasks)

47
Blocked v. Random Trials Hanlon
  • Blocked Practice AAABBBCCC
  • Low contextual interference
  • Random Practice ABACCBACB
  • High contextual interference
  • Random practice is more effective because of the
    effort required to distinguish between the
    performance requirements of several tasks during
    acquisition
  • Blocked practice allows client to use the same
    solution on each trial without having to generate
    it on each trial

48
Sabari Motor Learning Intervention for
Hemiplegia
  • Important to teach motor programs in meaningful
    contexts so that transference is more likely
  • Clients need opportunity to practice skills in
    various regulatory conditions so they can develop
    motor schema that versatile to meet daily
    situations
  • Differences in cognitive style require
    individualized motor training to develop
    effective encoding strategies

49
Sabari Contd
  • Problems encountered in adults with hemiplegia
  • Ineffective or absent motor programs
  • Impaired motor memory
  • Impaired feedback mechanisms
  • Impaired feed-forward mechanisms
  • Goal of programs are to teach individuals to
    develop problem solving strategies rather than
    develop specific motor skills

50
Jarus Motor Learning and OT
  • Knowledge of effects of changing the order of
    presentation of different motor tasks can be used
    to facilitate retention and transfer of motor
    skills
  • Important for planning OT treatment, we do not
    want the most effective performance, we want to
    maximize transference and retention
  • Need to increase the difficulty of learning
    context - most transferable to everyday
    situations

51
Case Mr. Taylor
  • 50 year old male, right side dominant
  • Experienced left hemisphere stroke October 2004
  • Affected
  • speech (expressive aphasia)
  • paralysis of right arm
  • memory
  • number of other elements

52
Questions
  • Aphasia affected his speech and also his writing,
    however he initially started writing again with
    his left handthis would help with what concept
    discussed earlier?
  • As Gord regained movement of his right side, how
    could we as OTs help him to re-learn to write?

53
References
  • Baddeley, A. D., Longman, D. J. A. (1978). The
    influence of length and frequency training
    session on the rate of learning to type.
    Ergonomics, 21, 627-635.
  • Magill, R. A. (2001). Motor Learning and
    Control Concepts and application, 7th ed.
    Toronto, Ontario McGraw and Hill.
  • Shea, Lai, Black, Park. (2000). Spacing
    practice sessions across days benefit the
    learning of motor skills. Human Motor Science,
    19, 737-760.
  • Wightman, D. C. Lintern, G. (1985) Part-task
    training strategies for tracking and manual
    control. Human Factors, 27, 267-283.

54
References
  • Carr, J. Shepherd, R. (2003). Stroke
    rehabilitation Guidelines for exercise and
    training to optimize motor skill. China
    Butterworth Heinemann.
  • Hanlon, R. E. (1996). Motor learning following
    unilateral stroke. Archives of Physical Medicine
    and Rehabilitation, 77, 811-815
  • Jarus, T. (1994). Motor learning and
    occupational therapy The organization of
    practice. The American Journal of Occupational
    Therapy, 48, 9, 810-815.
  • Marley, T. L., Ezekiel, H. J., Lehto, N. K.,
    Wishart, L. R., Lee, T. D. (2000). Application
    of motor learning principles The physiotherapy
    client as a problem-solver. Physiotherapy
    Canada, 315-320.
  • Schmidt, R. A. Wrisberg, C. A. (2000). Motor
    learning and performance A problem-based
    learning approach. United States of America
    Human Kinetics.
  • Shapero Sabari, J. (1991). Motor learning
    concepts applied to activity-based intervention
    with adults with hemiplegia. The American
    Journal of Occupational Therapy, 45, 6, 523-530.
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