Perceptual and motor learning underlies human stick-balancing skill

Journal article


Lee, Kwee-Yum, O'Dwyer, Nicholas, Halaki, Mark and Smith, Richard. (2015). Perceptual and motor learning underlies human stick-balancing skill. Journal of Neurophysiology (print). 113(1), pp. 156 - 171. https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.00538.2013
AuthorsLee, Kwee-Yum, O'Dwyer, Nicholas, Halaki, Mark and Smith, Richard
Abstract

We investigated the acquisition of skill in balancing a stick (52 cm, 34 g) on the fingertip in nine participants using three-dimensional motion analysis. After 3.5 h of practice over 6 wk, the participants could more consistently balance the stick for longer durations with greatly reduced magnitude and speed of stick and finger movements. Irrespective of level of skill, the balanced stick behaved like a normal noninverted pendulum oscillating under greater-than-gravity torque with simple harmonic motion about a virtual pivot located at the radius of gyration above the center of mass. The control input parameter was the magnitude ratio between the torque applied on the stick by the participant and the torque due to gravity. The participants utilized only a narrow range of this parameter, which did not change with practice, to rotate the stick like a linear mass-spring system. With increased skill, the stick therefore maintained the same period of oscillation but showed marked reductions in magnitude of both oscillation and horizontal translation. Better balancing was associated with 1) more accurate visual localization of the stick and proprioceptive localization of the finger and 2) reduced cross-coupling errors between finger and stick movements in orthogonal directions; i.e., finger movements in the anteroposterior plane became less coupled with stick tip movements in the mediolateral plane, and vice versa. Development of this fine motor skill therefore depended on perceptual and motor learning to provide improved estimation of sensorimotor state and precision of motor commands to an unchanging internal model of the rotational dynamics.

Year2015
JournalJournal of Neurophysiology (print)
Journal citation113 (1), pp. 156 - 171
ISSN0022-3077
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.00538.2013
Page range156 - 171
Research GroupSports Performance, Recovery, Injury and New Technologies (SPRINT) Research Centre
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File Access Level
Controlled
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