Abstract

When learning a new skill through an unknown environment, should we practice alone, or together with another beginner, or learn from the expert? It is normally helpful to have an expert guiding through unknown environmental dynamics. The guidance from the expert is fundamentally based on mutual interactions. From the perspective of the beginner, one needs to face dual unknown dynamics of the environment and motor coordination of the expert. In a cooperative visuo-haptic motor task, we asked novice participants to bring a virtual mass onto the specified target location under an unknown external force field. The task was completed by an individual or with an expert or another novice. In addition to evaluation of the motor performance, we evaluated the adaptability of the novice participants to a new partner while attempting to achieve a common goal together. The experiment was set in five phases; baseline for skill transfer and adaptability, learning and evaluation for adaptability and skill transfer respectively. The performance of the participants was characterized by using the time to target, effort index, and length of the trajectory. Experimental results suggested that (1) peer-to-peer interactions among paired beginners enhanced the motor learning most, (2) individuals practicing on their own (learning as a single) showed better motor learning than practicing under the expert's guidance, and (3) regarding the adaptability, peer-to-peer interactions induced higher adaptability to a new partner than the novice-to-expert interactions while attempting to achieve a common goal together. Thus, we conclude that the peer-to-peer interactions under a collaborative task can realize the best motor learning of the motor skills through the new environmental dynamics, and adaptability to others in order to achieve a goal together. We suggest that the peer-to-peer learning can induce both adaptability to others and learning of motor skills through the unknown environmental dynamics under mutual interactions. On the other hand, during the peer-to-peer interactions, the novice can learn how to coordinate motion with his/her partner (even though one is a new partner), and thus, is able to learn the motor skills through new environmental dynamics.

Highlights

  • IntroductionHumans need to learn a variety of motor skills to perform everyday tasks

  • As social beings, humans need to learn a variety of motor skills to perform everyday tasks

  • When comparing the last TS of the Baseline of Skill Transfer (B-S) phase and the first TS of the Evaluation of Skill Transfer (E-S) phase, we found that the average of time to target showed a significant decrease between the B-S and E-S phase in the N-N groups (p = 0.0020), not in the N-E groups (p = 0.0781)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Humans need to learn a variety of motor skills to perform everyday tasks. Auditory (Konvalinka et al, 2010; Wolf et al, 2018), visual (Newman-Norlund et al, 2008) or haptic feedback (van der Wel et al, 2011; Madan et al, 2014; Takagi et al, 2017; Özen et al, 2020) is important to coordinate actions and learn new skill sets in a cooperative task, such as ensemble music performance or dancing. In teaching dance, an expert may teach a novice how to dance by using the haptic interaction associated with moving in synchrony or by guiding desired movements. Physical therapists guide their patients via haptic interaction to help the person learn or relearn specific movements (Sawers and Ting, 2014). In addition to physical therapy provided by therapists, the recent technological advancements paved the way for the usage of robotic systems in helping humans to improve their motor skills and motor recovery and robot-assisted therapy in stroke rehabilitation (Wei et al, 2005)

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call