Abstract
AbstractResearch on motor learning has found evidence that learning rate is positively correlated with the learner’s motor variability. However, it is still unclear how to robotically promote that variability without compromising the learner’s sense of agency and motivation, which are crucial for motor learning. We propose a novel method to enhance motor variability during learning of a dynamic task by applying pseudorandom perturbing forces to the internal degree of freedom of the dynamic system rather than directly applying the forces to the learner’s limb. Twenty healthy participants practiced swinging a virtual pendulum to hit oncoming targets, either with the novel method or without disturbances, to evaluate the effect of the method on motor learning, skill transfer, motivation, and agency. We evaluated skill transfer using two tasks, changing either the target locations or the task dynamics by shortening the pendulum rod. The indirect haptic disturbance method successfully increased participants’ motor variability during training compared to training without disturbance. Although we did not observe group-level differences in learning, we observed divergent effects on skill generalization. The indirect haptic disturbances seemed to promote skill transfer to the altered task dynamics but limited transfer in the task with altered target positions. Motivation was not affected by the haptic disturbances, but future work is needed to determine if indirect haptic noise negatively impacts sense of agency. Increasing motor variability by indirect haptic disturbance is promising for enhancing skill transfer in tasks that incorporate complex dynamics. However, more research is needed to make indirect haptic disturbance a valuable tool for real-life motor learning situations.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory