Dissociative effects of normative feedback on motor automaticity and motor accuracy in learning an arm movement sequence

被引:11
|
作者
Zobe, Christina [1 ]
Krause, Daniel [1 ]
Blischke, Klaus [2 ]
机构
[1] Paderborn Univ, Dept Sports & Hlth, Warburgerstr 100, D-33098 Paderborn, Germany
[2] Saarland Univ, Inst Sport Sci, Saarbrucken, Germany
关键词
Augmented feedback; Automaticity; Dual task; Motor learning; SKILL; TASK; PERFORMANCE; AUTOMATIZATION; MECHANISMS; DOPAMINE; STAGE; BAD;
D O I
10.1016/j.humov.2019.06.004
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Within a pre-post-design, we scrutinized the effects of normative augmented feedback with positive and negative valence on learning motor accuracy, consistency as well as automaticity by means of a dual-task paradigm. Forty-two healthy physical education students were instructed to produce an arm-movement sequence as precisely as possible with regard to three spatial reversal points within a time limit of 1200 ms. Twenty-eight practiced an elbow-extension-flexion-sequence (690 trials) and 14 participants were tested as a control group without feedback practice. Valence of normative feedback was systematically manipulated by means of reference lines in a visual feedback display. The reference lines indicated performance of a putative peer-group either to be superior (negative valence, Normative-Negative-Group) or inferior (positive valence, Normative-Positive-Group) to participants' actual performance. As a result, dual-task costs (n-back error) significantly decreased solely in the Normative-Positive-Group, p = .003, eta(2)(p) = .51, but in no other group. Surprisingly, the mean absolute error for the motor task significantly decreased (i.e., precision increased) only in the Normative-Negative-Group with a large effect size, but in none of the other groups. Motor consistency was not significantly affected by the valence of normative feedback. According to the hypotheses of error-provoked attentional control, positive feedback-valence appears to enhance skill automatization, while - unexpectedly - only negative feedback-valence seems to enhance movement precision, which may be explained by effects of feedback valence on the learners aspiration level.
引用
收藏
页码:529 / 540
页数:12
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