| Literature DB >> 24194891 |
Winona Snapp-Childs1, Elizabeth Casserly, Mark Mon-Williams, Geoffrey P Bingham.
Abstract
Passive modeling of movements is often used in movement therapy to overcome disabilities caused by stroke or other disorders (e.g. Developmental Coordination Disorder or Cerebral Palsy). Either a therapist or, recently, a specially designed robot moves or guides the limb passively through the movement to be trained. In contrast, action theory has long suggested that effective skill acquisition requires movements to be actively generated. Is this true? In view of the former, we explicitly tested the latter. Previously, a method was developed that allows children with Developmental Coordination Disorder to produce effective movements actively, so as to improve manual performance to match that of typically developing children. In the current study, we tested practice using such active movements as compared to practice using passive movement. The passive movement employed, namely haptic tracking, provided a strong test of the comparison, one that showed that the mere inaction of the muscles is not the problem. Instead, lack of prospective control was. The result was no effective learning with passive movement while active practice with prospective control yielded significant improvements in performance.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24194891 PMCID: PMC3806834 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0077609
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1The PHANTOM Omni with the display.
Figure 2Paths used during the experiment.
A) Baseline Path, B) Transfer Path 1, C) Transfer Path 2, D) Training Path 1, E) Training Path 2, F) Training Path 3.
Figure 3Mean trial durations for the Baseline Path by support level (1 = high = high spring stiffness; 6 = low = low spring stiffness), group, and session.
Figure 4Mean trial durations (SE) for paths with low support levels by group and session/path type.
Mean Frequency Off Path (SE) during Low Support by Group, Path, and Session.
| Group | Baseline Path at Baseline (Level 6) | Baseline Path at Post-Test (Level 6) | Transfer Paths (Level 6) |
| Active | 14.33 (2.90) | 4.92 (0.61) | 6.71 (0.85) |
| Passive | 11.88 (1.25) | 7.58 (1.08) | 10.50 (1.38) |
| Control | 14.12 (2.60) | 6.92 (1.04) | 10.94 (0.99) |