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Definition
(1) Forebrain - Cerebral Hemispheres, Thalmus, Basal Nuclei
(2) Brainstem - Midbrain, Pons, Midulla
(3) Cerebellum
(4) Spinal Cord
(Image - CNS Slide 6) |
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Cerebral Hemispheres (Cortex), Thalamus, Basal Nuclei |
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Cerebral Hemispheres (Cortex) |
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Thin layer of grey matter (cell bodies) 1/2 cm thick |
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In forebrain
Relay center for ALL sensory information |
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In forebrain nuclei/ganglia > cluster of cell bodies involved in motor control |
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have fatty insulation (myelin) |
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Midbrain, Pons, Medulla
Older brain structure Simple movements (walking, gait) Ends at foramen magnum Communicates with cortex |
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Sits on the back of the brain lots of grey matter Coordination of movement patterns |
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Fibers pass the thalamus through the midbrain and pons to the medulla
At medullospinal junction, 85-90% of fibers cross the midline at the pyramidal decussation and form the lateral cortical spinal tract Fibers that do not cross form the anterior corticospinal tract |
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Corticalspinal tract
Where crossover occurs |
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Descending tracts from brainstem |
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3 Sets of Nuclei
Rubrospinal - from red nucleus to flexors of the upper extremity
Vestibulospinal - from vestibular nuclei to extensors (balance)
Reticulospinal - from reticular nuclei to extensors (posture)
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descending tract from brainstem
From red nuclei Controls flexors of arms |
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Descending tracts from brainstem
From vestibular nuclei Serving extensors balance |
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Descending tract from brainstem From Reticular nuclei serving extensors posture and sleep-wake cycle |
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A motor neuron and all the muscle fibers that it innervates One muscle fiber is innervated by one motor neuron One motor neuron can innervate many muscle fibers |
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Henneman's Size Principle |
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Definition
When a group of motoneurons are activated, those with the smallest somas are recruited first because they have the lowest threshold for synaptic activation and respond to the weakest input. Smaller motor units are activated before larger motor units
First > smallest, slow twitch, low threshold |
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Force in response to one action potential
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Low maximal force Long contraction time Fatigue resistant |
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High peak force Fast contraction time |
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Determined by:
The number of motor neurons recruited (Motor Unit Recruitment) What their firing frequencies are (Motor Unit Firing Rate) |
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Definition of Motor Skill |
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the capability to coordinate limb and/or body segments to accomplish a specific goal
require voluntary body, head, and/or limb movement to achieve its goal |
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Characteristics of Motor SKills |
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(1) Goal directed (Purpose)
(2) Performed voluntarily (not reflexive)
(3) Require body, head, limb movement
(4) Are learned or relearned |
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What classifies a motor skill? |
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Size of primary musculature required (Fine or Gross)
Specificity of where actions begin or end (Discrete or Continuous or Serial)
Stability of the environmental context (Open or Closed) |
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Size of Primary Musculature Required |
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Classifies a motor skill
Gross or Fine |
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Specificity of where actions begin or end |
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Classifies a motor skill
Discrete, Continuous, or Serial |
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Stability of the environmental context |
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Classifies a motor skill
Open or Closed |
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Use of small muscles to achieve the goal of the skill
Control/ More movement precision
Ex. piano playing, writing, typing, archery |
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Use or large muscles to achieve the goal of the skill
Less movement precision
Ex. Cycling, walking, running, jumping |
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Has defined beginning and end points
Usually requiring a simple movement
Ex. flipping a light switch – a one-movement skill |
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Has arbitrary beginning and end points
Involve repetitive movements
Ex. steering a car, walking, swimming, cycling |
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Involves a series of discrete skills
Performed in a specific order
Ex. using a stick shift in an automobile, baseball pitch, triple jump |
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Performed in a non-stable, unpredictable environment where an object or environmental context is in motion and determines when to begin the action (externally paced)
Ex. running a race w/other runners, batting a pitched ball, 6 on 6 volleyball |
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Performed in a stable or predictable environment where the performer determines when to begin the action
(self-paced)
Ex. hitting a ball off a tee, running around cones, bowling |
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the continuation of practice beyond the amount needed to achieve a certain performance criterion (aka – extra practice)
positive influence on retention performance for motor learning skills |
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Overlearning lead to poor performance |
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Boredom - skills were too simple to learn
Practice Varibaility - decreased capability to remember the movement |
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amount of rest between practice sessions or trials is very short
Longer work period
Shorter rest interval
Fewer practice sessions
longer sessions |
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the amount of rest between practice sessions or trails is relatively long
Longer rest interval between trials
More practice sessions
shorter sessions |
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What kind of practice leads to better learning? Why? |
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Definition
Mass vs. Distributed
Distributed - more, shorter, practice sessions
Why??
Fatigue hypothesis, Cognitive effort hypothesis and memory consolidation hypothesis |
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3 Hypothesis about massed practice |
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Definition
Fatigue hypothesis
Cognitive effort hypothesis - attention decreased
Memory consolidation hypothesis - it takes time to form new pathways |
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Irony of practice variability |
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Definition
Practice variability (random practice) will produce more performance errors in practice during initial learning
In retention trials better Learning has occured |
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3 Kinds of Variable Practice |
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Blocked practice
Serial Practice
Random Practice
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10 min of one, then 10 min of next, etc |
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jump, hop, skip, jump, hop, skip
same order everytime |
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Do in whatever order
hop, jump, jump, run, hop, run, hop, jump |
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skill is low in complexity (few components)
skill high in organization (interdependent)
practice of the whole skill is best Ex. buttoning a shirt, throwing a dart |
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skill is high in complexity (many components)
skill is low in organization (independent)
practice of part skill is best
Ex. tennis serve, shifting gears |
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3 ways to implement part practice of a skill |
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Definition
Fractionalization
Segmentation
Simplification
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Way to implement part practice
practicing individual limbs first for a skill that involves asymmetric coordination of the arms and legs
Ex. playing guitar and piano, tennis serve |
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Way to implement part practice
separating the skill into parts and practicing the parts so that it is practiced together with the next part (progressive)
Ex. Piano, typing |
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Way to implement part practice
reducing the difficulty of specific parts or features of a skill
change objects, change speed, musical accompaniment |
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Mental practice definition |
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Definition
The cognitive rehearsal of a physical skill in the absence of overt physical movements
thinking about the cognitive or procedural aspects of a motor skill
Engages in visual or kinesthetic imagery of the performance of a skill or part of a skill |
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2 types of mental imagery |
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Actually imagines being in their own body and experiencing the sensations that occur with the performance |
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View themselves as and observer “watching a movie” of the performance |
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Arousal level regulation - (ie. decrease anxiety)
Build Confidence
Focus
Design Strategy
Practice Skills
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Why is mental practice effective? |
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Definition
Neuromusuclar hypothesis - EMG recordings show muscles involved during mental practice
AND
Cognitive hypothesis - "what to do" during first stages of learning |
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Definition
Sodium outside, more positive
Potassium inside, more negative |
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Definition
Amount of charge to stop the diffusion potential
Voltage required to stop the flow
Balance between electrical and chemical gradients (depends on charge and concentration) |
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Definition
potential energy from the concentration gradient |
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Equilibrium Potenital Equation |
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Definition
Nernst Equation
to calculate EP you must know the concentration
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How could you calculate what the voltage is inside the cell? |
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Definition
Goldman-Hodgkin-Katz equation
Concentration of all ions and their permeability |
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