DocumentCode
60124
Title
The Effect of Haptic Guidance on Learning a Hybrid Rhythmic-Discrete Motor Task
Author
Marchal-Crespo, Laura ; Bannwart, Mathias ; Riener, Robert ; Vallery, Heike
Author_Institution
Sensory-Motor Syst. (SMS) Lab., ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
Volume
8
Issue
2
fYear
2015
fDate
April-June 1 2015
Firstpage
222
Lastpage
234
Abstract
Bouncing a ball with a racket is a hybrid rhythmic-discrete motor task, combining continuous rhythmic racket movements with discrete impact events. Rhythmicity is exceptionally important in motor learning, because it underlies fundamental movements such as walking. Studies suggested that rhythmic and discrete movements are governed by different control mechanisms at different levels of the Central Nervous System. The aim of this study is to evaluate the effect of fixed/fading haptic guidance on learning to bounce a ball to a desired apex in virtual reality with varying gravity. Changing gravity changes dominance of rhythmic versus discrete control: The higher the value of gravity, the more rhythmic the task; lower values reduce the bouncing frequency and increase dwell times, eventually leading to a repetitive discrete task that requires initiation and termination, resembling target-oriented reaching. Although motor learning in the ball-bouncing task with varying gravity has been studied, the effect of haptic guidance on learning such a hybrid rhythmic-discrete motor task has not been addressed. We performed an experiment with thirty healthy subjects and found that the most effective training condition depended on the degree of rhythmicity: Haptic guidance seems to hamper learning of continuous rhythmic tasks, but it seems to promote learning for repetitive tasks that resemble discrete movements.
Keywords
control engineering computing; handicapped aids; haptic interfaces; medical robotics; virtual reality; ball-bouncing task; central nervous system; discrete impact event; haptic guidance; hybrid rhythmic-discrete motor task; motor learning; robotic mechanism; virtual reality; Elbow; Fading; Gravity; Haptic interfaces; Robots; Training; Trajectory; Haptic guidance; fading guidance; hybrid rhythmic-discrete task; motor learning;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Haptics, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1939-1412
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TOH.2014.2375173
Filename
6967807
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