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Neural mechanism underlying self-controlled feedback on motor skill learning
Affiliation:1. Cognition and Brain Plasticity Group, Bellvitge Biomedical Research Institute (IDIBELL), Spain;2. Department of Basic Psychology, University of Barcelona, Spain;3. Laboratory for Motor Learning and Neural Plasticity, Department of Psychology, Concordia University, Canada;4. Institució Catalana de Recerca i Estudis Avançats (ICREA), Barcelona, Spain
Abstract:The present study investigated the neural mechanisms of self-controlled (SC) feedback underlying its learning advantages. Forty-two participants, including 24 females (16.43 ± 2.61 years) and 18 males (17.56 ± 0.86 years), were randomly assigned to a SC or yoked (YK) group. The 6-key-pressing task with a goal movement time was adopted as the experimental task. The behavioral results showed that the SC group demonstrated superior performance in transfer; however, the differences in retention did not reach statistical significance. Event-related potential analyses revealed that the SC group exhibited larger post-stimulus and post-feedback P3 amplitudes than the YK group in the frontal regions; these amplitudes were larger in the YK group in the parietal regions. The post-response error positivity amplitude was found to be larger in the YK group than in the SC group. These results suggest that SC feedback may allow the learner to more actively process the task stimuli and feedback information, and contributes to enhancing the learner’s motivation and attachment to the task being practiced. The present study provides a neurophysiological explanation for why SC feedback is effective in learning a new motor skill.
Keywords:Self-controlled feedback  Feedback processing  Error processing  Stimulus processing  Motor learning  ERP
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