The parameter preferences of acquired motor programs for rapid,discrete movements: I. Transfer of training |
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Authors: | Raymond Klein Steve Levy John McCabe |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Psychology, Dalhousie University, B3H 4J1, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
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Abstract: | Sixty subjects made discrete movements to visual targets without concurrent visual feedback. After 160 acquisition trials with a single target/movement, subjects were divided into five groups for transfer. The major independent variable was the relationship between the acquisition and transfer movements. For three groups, extent, duration, or velocity was the same in acquisition and in transfer, with the other two parameters changing. For the remaining two groups, either all parameters were changed or no parameters were changed (i.e., subjects performed the same movement). It was found that, as long as one parameter remained the same, subjects performed as well as if nothing were changed. Only when all parameters were changed did performance deteriorate. The results are in direct contrast to those of Newell and Zelaznik (1980) and provide no support for their conclusion that velocity is a more important parameter than movement duration or extent. |
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