210 likes | 446 Views
Information Feedback Family. Intrinsic Feedback Extrinsic Feedback. Intrinsic Feedback. internal feedback that is received during and after a movement is executed e.g., Proprioceptive Feedback Muscle Spindles Golgi Tendon Organs Joint Receptors. Extrinsic Feedback.
E N D
Information Feedback Family • Intrinsic Feedback • Extrinsic Feedback
Intrinsic Feedback internal feedback that is received during and after a movement is executed e.g., Proprioceptive Feedback • Muscle Spindles • Golgi Tendon Organs • Joint Receptors
Extrinsic Feedback usually augmented feedback provided during or after a response from an individual or device • Knowledge of Performance • Knowledge of Results
Knowledge of Results (KR) Is augmented, verbal or verbalizable information that refers to the attainment of an environmental goal. (Did the response accomplish the intended movement goal?) e.g., “the ball rolled two inches to the right of the pin”
Knowledge of Performance (KP) Is augmented information that refers to the actual movement pattern that produced an action. Information is received about the actual performance & execution of the movement, often presented in relation to a standard of correctness. e.g., “your arm was not extended when you hit that overhead”
Knowledge of Results: How Important? • Focus of attention work • Wulf & Weigelt, 1997; Wulf, Hoss & Prinz, 1998; Wulf, Lauterbach, & Toole, in press; • Erroneous KR • Buekers, Magill, & Hall (1992)
Bilodeau, Bilodeau, & Shumsky (1959) • In terms of absolute error, performance improved (particularly in earlier trials) only after trials with KR were provided. • On trials following KR presentation, there was no performance effect due to the relative frequency. (trials without KR showed no performance increase) • Concluded that learning is related to the absolute frequency & not the relative frequency of KR.
Fading of KR Is a schedule which provides feedback (KR) more frequently early in practice, and then gradually reduces the number of trials for which feedback is provided
Fading KR Absolute Error Acquisition Trials Retention
Summary KR Is a format of presenting knowledge of results in which a predetermined number of trials is completed before knowledge of results is presented for that set
Summary-KR SUMMARY T1 T2 T3 T4 T5 KR1 KR2 KR3 KR4 KR5 IMMEDIATET1 KR1 T2 KR2 T3 KR3 T4 KR4 T5 KR5
Gable, Shea, & Wright (1991) Absolute Constant Error (N) SUMMARY CONDITION
Schmidt et al. (1990) 180 deg 0 deg
Optimum Summary Length KR 5/5 KR1/1 Score KR10/10 KR15/15 ACQUISITION TRIAL BLOCK RETENTION
Bandwidth KR Involves setting some criterion range of errors within which knowledge of results (KR) is not provided and outside of which KR is provided
Bandwidth KR (10%) KR Presented 360 ms 400 ms No KR Presented 440 ms KR Presented
Bandwidth KR (Sherwood, 1988) • With larger bandwidths there is a improvement in consistency (VE) • With larger bandwidths have a reduction in relative frequency of KR
Temporal Components of KR Inter-Response Interval Trial n KR n Trial n+1 KR-delay Post KR delay
KR Trials Delay Trials-Delay 1: T1 T2 KR1 T3 KR2 T4 KR3 T5 KR4.......... Immediate: T1KR1T2 KR2 T3KR3T4 KR4 T5..........
Lavery & Suddon (1962) Total Error (cm) Acquisition Trial Block Retention
Guidance Hypothesis: Negative Effects • Subjects may become reliant on the guiding properties of KR • Eliminate the need to process a variety of task related cues • Encourages trial to trial instability