Print Email Facebook Twitter Haptically Enhanced Motor Variability Shows Contrary Effects on Transfer of Learning Title Haptically Enhanced Motor Variability Shows Contrary Effects on Transfer of Learning Author Arink, Wouter (TU Delft Mechanical, Maritime and Materials Engineering) Contributor Marchal Crespo, L. (mentor) Beckers, N.W.M. (mentor) Degree granting institution Delft University of Technology Programme Mechanical Engineering | BioMechanical Design Date 2022-04-04 Abstract In order to improve skill acquisition and neurorehabilitation, we need to improve our understanding of human motor learning. It has been shown that innate variability of movements made by an individual when performing a motor task (motor variability) might enhance skill acquisition. Augmenting motor variability could therefore be a promising method to enhance learning. However, current methods that enhance motor variability show divergent results and need to be better understood. In a lab-based experiment with twenty healthy participants,we studied the effect of a new method that haptically increases participants’ motor variability in learning a dynamic task, i.e., controlling a pendulum. This new method consisted of applying pseudo-random perturbation forces to the internal degree of freedom of the dynamic system (indirect haptic noise), instead of applying forces directly on the trainee’s hands as previously studied. The main task consisted of swinging a virtual pendulum to hit incoming targets with the pendulum ball. To assess generalization of learning we used two transfer tasks, which consisted of altered target positions or altered task dynamics (i.e., a pendulum with shorter rod length). We evaluated the effect of the new methodon learning by comparing performance gains after training to a control group who trained without perturbations. We found that the perturbations successfully increased participants’ motor variability during training. Although we observed no learning benefits of training with this indirect haptic noise for the trainedtask compared to the control group, we observed divergent effects for transfer of learning. Participants that trained with indirect haptic noise seemed to benefit in transfer of learning to altered task dynamics but not in the task with altered target positions. Increasing motor variability by indirect haptic noise is promising for enhancing skill acquisition, specially in transfer of learning, and in tasks that incorporate complex dynamics. However, more research is needed to make indirect haptic noise a valuable tool for real life motor learning situations, e.g., inrobotic neurorehabilitation. Subject Motor LearningMotor VariabilityHaptic Noise To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:98a90f79-480d-4547-9ec9-3dd8b233f18d Part of collection Student theses Document type master thesis Rights © 2022 Wouter Arink Files PDF Thesis_Wouter_Arink.pdf 7.66 MB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:98a90f79-480d-4547-9ec9-3dd8b233f18d/datastream/OBJ/view