Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Movement automaticity as functional variability
View through CrossRef
Functional variability has been suggested to reflect movement automaticity. To test this hypothesis, we used the Uncontrolled Manifold (UCM) approach to operationalize functional variability in darts. We gauged the association between movement automaticity and functional variability in four different ways. First, we investigated whether functional variability was higher in the second half of a throw than in the first half, because the duration of a darts throw is too short for conscious control to intervene. Second, we compared whether functional variability was higher in experts than in novices, because motor control is presumed to be more automatized in experts. Third, we manipulated conscious control via attentional focus instructions, presuming that internal focus instructions result in reduced automaticity, and thus may decrease functional variability. Fourth, we administered the Movement Specific Reinvestment Scale (MSRS), which estimates the propensity for conscious control and was therefore expected to be associated with functional variability. In line with the hypotheses, functional variability was higher in the second half than in the first half of darts throws. Furthermore, experts displayed more functional variability than novices. These results suggest that functional variability reflects movement automaticity. However, neither the focus manipulations, nor MSRS scores significantly predicted functional variability. Further study is therefore required to ascertain whether functional variability reflects movement automaticity.
Center for Open Science
Title: Movement automaticity as functional variability
Description:
Functional variability has been suggested to reflect movement automaticity.
To test this hypothesis, we used the Uncontrolled Manifold (UCM) approach to operationalize functional variability in darts.
We gauged the association between movement automaticity and functional variability in four different ways.
First, we investigated whether functional variability was higher in the second half of a throw than in the first half, because the duration of a darts throw is too short for conscious control to intervene.
Second, we compared whether functional variability was higher in experts than in novices, because motor control is presumed to be more automatized in experts.
Third, we manipulated conscious control via attentional focus instructions, presuming that internal focus instructions result in reduced automaticity, and thus may decrease functional variability.
Fourth, we administered the Movement Specific Reinvestment Scale (MSRS), which estimates the propensity for conscious control and was therefore expected to be associated with functional variability.
In line with the hypotheses, functional variability was higher in the second half than in the first half of darts throws.
Furthermore, experts displayed more functional variability than novices.
These results suggest that functional variability reflects movement automaticity.
However, neither the focus manipulations, nor MSRS scores significantly predicted functional variability.
Further study is therefore required to ascertain whether functional variability reflects movement automaticity.
Related Results
Automaticity in Bilingualism and Second Language Learning
Automaticity in Bilingualism and Second Language Learning
Abstract
In this chapter, we examine automaticity in light of the role it might play in second language acquisition and in bilingual functioning. We review various t...
Genesis and Regulation of the Heart Automaticity
Genesis and Regulation of the Heart Automaticity
The heart automaticity is a fundamental physiological function in higher organisms. The spontaneous activity is initiated by specialized populations of cardiac cells generating per...
The Power of the Wave: Activism Rainbow Region-Style
The Power of the Wave: Activism Rainbow Region-Style
Introduction The counterculture that arose during the 1960s and 1970s left lasting social and political reverberations in developed nations. This was a time of increasing affluenc...
Evaluating complex walking in aging and neurological disease : from motor behavior to brain activity
Evaluating complex walking in aging and neurological disease : from motor behavior to brain activity
<p dir="ltr"><b>Aim</b>: To develop and validate a measurement protocol for evaluating cognitive-motor performance during complex walking in younger adults, older...
Evaluating complex walking in aging and neurological disease : from motor behavior to brain activity
Evaluating complex walking in aging and neurological disease : from motor behavior to brain activity
<p dir="ltr"><b>Aim</b>: To develop and validate a measurement protocol for evaluating cognitive-motor performance during complex walking in younger adults, older...
The nature of automatic semantic retrieval in individuals with mild cognitive impairment
The nature of automatic semantic retrieval in individuals with mild cognitive impairment
The number of people diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease (AD), a progressive and terminal kind of dementia, continues to rise with an estimated 14 million Americans affected by 2050...
Sleep spindles coordinate corticostriatal reactivations during the emergence of automaticity
Sleep spindles coordinate corticostriatal reactivations during the emergence of automaticity
Plasticity within the corticostriatal network is known to regulate the balance between behavioral flexibility and automaticity. Repeated training of an action has been shown to bia...
The cellular electrophysiologic effects of digitalis on human atrial fibers.
The cellular electrophysiologic effects of digitalis on human atrial fibers.
We used microelectrode techniques to study the indirect and direct actions of ouabain on human atrial fibers (HAF) obtained from patients with congenital heart disease undergoing o...

