Abstract

The aim of this experiment was to assess if the previously supported relationship between the structure of motor variability and performance changes when the task or organismic constraints encourage individuals to adjust their movement to achieve a goal. Forty-two healthy volunteers (aged 26.05 ± 5.02 years) performed three sets of cyclic pointing movements, 600 cycles each. Every set was performed under different conditions: 1) without a target; 2) with a target; 3) with a target and a financial reward. The amount of performance variability was analysed using the standard deviation of the medial-lateral (ML) and anterior-posterior (AP) axes and the bivariate variable error. The structure of the variability was assessed by Detrended Fluctuation Analysis (DFA) of the following time series: the coordinate values of the endpoint in ML, AP axes and resultant distance (RD), the hand orientation and the movement time. The performance of the task constrained with a target, or a target and reward, required higher implication to adjust an individual’s movements to achieve the task goal, showing a decrease in dispersions and lower autocorrelation. Under the condition without a target, variability dispersion was positively related to autocorrelation of the movement values from ML axis and RD time series, and negatively related to the values from the hand orientation time series. There was a loss of the relationship between variability structure and performance when the task was constrained by the target and the reward. That could indicate different strategies of the participants to achieve the objective. Considering the results and previous studies, the relationship between variability structure and performance could depend on task constraints such as feedback, difficulty or the skill level of participants and it is mediated by individual constraints such as implication or intentionality.

Highlights

  • IntroductionEven if the subject tries to exhibit consistency, every movement is different from the previous one

  • In cyclic movements, even if the subject tries to exhibit consistency, every movement is different from the previous one

  • Pairwise comparison between conditions revealed higher dispersion of endpoint position in the condition without a target while the lowest dispersions were found in the conditions with a target and a reward, showing a significant decrease of variability (MLV, F1,41 = 25.696, p < 0.001, n2p = 0.385; APV, F1,41 = 15.957, p < 0.001, n2p = 0.280; Bivariate Variable Error (BVE), F1,41 = 30.554, p < 0.001, n2p = 0.427)

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Summary

Introduction

Even if the subject tries to exhibit consistency, every movement is different from the previous one. These movement variations, as a prominent feature of motor control, have been a rising topic of interest over recent decades. By recent studies, which suggests that movement variability is structured and reveals specific details of the system dynamics [1,2,3,4]. Movement variability helps to exploit the degrees of freedom of the biological system [9,10,11], providing the ability to adapt to the constraints (organismic, task and environmental) that shape the individual’s behavior [12]

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