Phil Weir-Mayta1, Kristie A Spencer2, Steven M Bierer3, Ayoub Daliri4, Peter Ondish5, Ashley France2, Erika Hutchison2, Caitlin Sears2. 1. California State University Fullerton, Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, 800 N. State College Blvd. Suite 420, Fullerton, CA 92831. 2. University of Washington, Dept. of Speech & Hearing Sciences, 1417 NE 42nd St. Seattle, WA 98105. 3. University of Washington, Dept. of Otolaryngology, 1959 NE Pacific St., Seattle, WA 98195. 4. Arizona State University, College of Health Solutions, 550 N. 3rd St., Phoenix, AZ 85004. 5. University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, Department of Psychology, 603 E. Daniel St., Champaign, IL 61820.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The principles of motor learning (PML) emerged from studies of limb motor skills in healthy, young adults. The applicability of these principles to speech motor learning, and to older adults, is uncertain. AIMS: The purpose of this study was to examine one PML, feedback frequency, and its effect on retention and generalization of a novel speech and comparable tracing task. METHODS: Sixty older adults completed a speech motor learning task requiring the production of a novel phrase at speaking rates 2 times and 3 times slower than habitual rate. Participants also completed a limb motor learning task requiring the tracing of a sine wave 2x and 3x slower than habitual rate. Participants were randomly assigned to receive feedback every trial, every 5th trial, or every 10th trial. Mean absolute error was measured to examine immediate generalization, delayed generalization, and 2-day retention. FINDINGS: Results suggested that feedback frequency did not have an effect on the retention and generalization of the speech or manual task, supporting the small but growing literature highlighting the constraints of generalizing the PML to other modalities and populations.
BACKGROUND: The principles of motor learning (PML) emerged from studies of limb motor skills in healthy, young adults. The applicability of these principles to speech motor learning, and to older adults, is uncertain. AIMS: The purpose of this study was to examine one PML, feedback frequency, and its effect on retention and generalization of a novel speech and comparable tracing task. METHODS: Sixty older adults completed a speech motor learning task requiring the production of a novel phrase at speaking rates 2 times and 3 times slower than habitual rate. Participants also completed a limb motor learning task requiring the tracing of a sine wave 2x and 3x slower than habitual rate. Participants were randomly assigned to receive feedback every trial, every 5th trial, or every 10th trial. Mean absolute error was measured to examine immediate generalization, delayed generalization, and 2-day retention. FINDINGS: Results suggested that feedback frequency did not have an effect on the retention and generalization of the speech or manual task, supporting the small but growing literature highlighting the constraints of generalizing the PML to other modalities and populations.
Entities:
Keywords:
feedback; generalization; limb; motor learning; speech
Authors: Rachael D Seidler; Jessica A Bernard; Taritonye B Burutolu; Brett W Fling; Mark T Gordon; Joseph T Gwin; Youngbin Kwak; David B Lipps Journal: Neurosci Biobehav Rev Date: 2009-10-20 Impact factor: 8.989