| Literature DB >> 26190986 |
Dav Clark1, Frank Schumann2, Stewart H Mostofsky3.
Abstract
Bodily movement has long been employed as a foundation for cultivating mental skills such as attention, self-control or mindfulness, with recent studies documenting the positive impacts of mindful movement training, such as yoga and tai chi. A parallel "mind-body connection" has also been observed in many developmental disorders. We elaborate a spectrum of mindfulness by considering ADHD, in which deficient motor control correlates with impaired (disinhibited) behavioral control contributing to defining features of excessive distractibility and impulsivity. These data provide evidence for an important axis of variation for wellbeing, in which skillful cognitive control covaries with a capacity for skillful movement. We review empirical and theoretical literature on attention, cognitive control, mind wandering, mindfulness and skill learning, endorsing a model of skilled attention in which motor plans, attention, and executive goals are seen as mutually co-defining aspects of skilled behavior that are linked by reciprocal inhibitory and excitatory connections. Thus, any movement training should engage "higher-order" inhibition and selection and develop a repertoire of rehearsed procedures that coordinate goals, attention and motor plans. However, we propose that mindful movement practice may improve the functional quality of rehearsed procedures, cultivating a transferrable skill of attention. We adopt Langer's spectrum of mindful learning that spans from "mindlessness" to engagement with the details of the present task and contrast this with the mental attitudes cultivated in standard mindfulness meditation. We particularly follow Feldenkrais' suggestion that mindful learning of skills for organizing the body in movement might transfer to other forms of mental activity. The results of mindful movement training should be observed in multiple complementary measures, and may have tremendous potential benefit for individuals with ADHD and other populations.Entities:
Keywords: ADHD; Feldenkrais; attention; cognitive control; inhibition; mindfulness; movement; skill
Year: 2015 PMID: 26190986 PMCID: PMC4484342 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2015.00297
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
Figure 1(A) Schematic of reciprocal inhibition and selection between sensory, motor, and executive functions (adapted from Smith et al., 1999). “Feed-forward” connections from sensory and executive goal representations (solid blue, left-to-right) are a standard part of even the most simplistic models of sensorimotor control. More recent connectionist and dynamical systems approaches highlight that reciprocal connections are the norm throughout the nervous system (i.e., including dashed orange, right-to-left connections), giving rise to more complex dynamics. Thus, functions such as “attention” or “behavioral control” arise via coordinated interactions between evolving representations (we refer to this coordination as a procedure). The types of representation depicted here are likely supported by distributed brain networks and not fully dissociable, and we argue that sensorimotor control activity serves to coordinate and organize between these networks. (B) Embedding sensory, motor and executive functions within the sensorimotor loop. Here, enacting volitional or habitual motor plans continuously generates concrete, immediate and differentiated sensations via the body and world. These signals can be compared with states that are desired (via goals) or predicted (via motor efference). Hence, procedures of skilled coordination of reciprocal mechanisms of inhibition and selection underlying skilled attention and skilled cognitive control can be refined directly within the sensorimotor loop. This yields the profound potential for improvement of selection and inhibition processes, in particular in populations diagnosed with ADHD where impaired motor inhibition/selection is a diagnostic feature. Movement figures reprinted with permission from Russell (2014).
Attentional and cognitive control as coordinated sensorimotor processes.
| Process | Characteristics | Sensorimotor influence | Discussion |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cognitive development (A-not-B error) | Goal fixation via persistent motor activity | Resolved by external inhibition of motor activity or by strengthening of sensation | |
| Mind wandering | Decoupling of intended goals (tasks) leading to wandering thoughts | Created by unintended goals or distracting sensations | |
| Beginning mindfulness via body sensation (body scan) | Decoupling of unintended goals leading to reduced rumination | Achieved by enhanced sensation of the body | |
| Focused attention meditation practice | Process of volitional focusing on intended goal and decoupling from unintended goal | Achieved by learning efficient (re-) selection of intended goals via practice of cognitive control | |
| ADHD | Dysregulation of cortical mechanisms of inhibition and selection yielding inattention and impulsivity | Dysregulation plays out across cognitive and motor behavior; Mindful movement as a basis for improvement via learning procedural co-ordination of selection/inhibition | |
| Mindful movement practice (e.g., Tai Chi Feldenkrais) | Skilled coordination of goals, sensations and motor/cognitive control within structural procedures | Achieved by learning abstract higher-level coordination skills via mindful learning (sensitivity to distinctions), fostered by the continuous and immediate sensorimotor feedback enacted in movement | |
| Inhibiting muscular contraction (ATM “lengthening the hamstrings”) | Pattern of chronic habitual selection resulting in muscular contraction (shortening) | Resolved by an initially pre-conceptual mode of mindful sensation that derives coherent patterns of inhibition of habitual musclar contraction, which later establish co-ordination procedures via skill learning | |
| Coordinating attention: motoric mind wandering (ATM “flex hand to stand”) | Decoupling from intended movement via absorption of control and attention in a secondary movement | (1) Sensing sensorimotor relations and goal deviations; (2) practice of goal-maintenance via initially cognitive co-ordination; (3) eventually establishing skilled goal-maintenance via procedural co-ordination of attention via skill learning; (4) continued practice over a large variety of movement contexts may lead to transferable skills for goal-maintenance |
Modes of skill learning (adapted from Wulf, .
| Mode | Features of movements |
|---|---|
| Conceptual mode | Movements are slow, inconsistent, and inefficient (awkward). Considerable higher-order activity, fragile under distraction. Possibility to develop novel associations and procedures. |
| Associative mode (transferrable structures, abstract representations) | Flexible application of learned associations and procedures. |
| Autonomous mode (motor coding, not directly accessible to consciousness) | Fast, efficient execution in learned contexts (decreasing transfer). Attention can make performance worse (cf. Choking). |
These “modes” are often presented as “phases.” The switch in terminology is meant to suggest that this may not be a strict or one-way progression.
Figure 2Mindful movement practices afford a large variability of tasks and engage in active, exploratory learning. Movement variability and exploration induces structural learning of what is common between two tasks (such as between cycling and motor cycling or between different movement lessons). Structural generalization of skills skills fosters transfer to novel domains. Depicted is a small subset of starting positions of the over 600 classical ATM lessons (matrix in the upper right corner) developed by Feldenkrais, exploring different movement themes over a broad variety of movement contexts. Similarly large numbers of structural movement variations are provided by traditional practices such as tai chi. Figure adapted with permission from Russell (2014).
Figure 3(A) and (B) Frames from Awareness Through Movement (ATM) supplementary videos 2 and 3 demonstrating “motoric mind wandering.” (A) Introducing the dual task. An excerpt from Haller (2014), vol. 2, disc 3. The student learns to perform a rhythmic movement of the hand while doing another movement (see Supplementary Video 2). (B) Increased challenge. The student struggles to remain engaged with the rhythmic movement of her hand while doing another challenging movement. The overall goal is to learn to coordinate control and attention to perform both movements simultaneously (see Supplementary Video 3). (C) Frame from supplementary video 4 demonstrating effects of ATM. A group of Seattle 18 fireman volunteers took part in a one week pilot program of Body Awareness Training based upon the teachings of Moshe Feldenkrais. Video data was collected before and after the training to establish quantitative measures of improvement. The man in the video was a supervisor and not as exposed to physical demands. But, changes are evident (see Supplementary Video 4). Provided with permission of Jeff Haller.