Fitch, Tuller, Turvey (1982) Tuning of synergies via perception.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Pat Langley Computational Learning Laboratory Center for the Study of Language and Information Stanford University, Stanford, California USA
Advertisements

Module 1 Motor Programmes Plus Open and Closed Loop Theory
SEHS Topic 5.1 : The Characteristic and classification of skill
AS Level – Week 14 &15 Theory Module 1 Optimizing Learning and Performance.
Behavioral Theories of Motor Control
Motor Control Theory Dynamic & Ecological Approaches (Large parts adapted from Wallace, 1993)
Fundamental Concepts of Motor Development Developmental Systems Theories.
Image Analysis Phases Image pre-processing –Noise suppression, linear and non-linear filters, deconvolution, etc. Image segmentation –Detection of objects.
Watch the following clips, what makes these children so good?
AS Level – Week 7 Theory Module 1 The Nature and Classification of Skill and Ability.
Chapter 3 Motor Ability Concept: A variety of abilities underlie motor skill learning and performance success.
AS Level – Week 27 Theory Module 1 Schema Theory.
This presentation introduces students to the anthropological definition and use of the concept of culture. It focuses on all of the aspects of culture.
HRM A – G. Grote ETHZ, WS 06/07 Human Resource Management (HRM) What? …the functional area of an organization that is responsible for all aspects of hiring.
CS274 Spring 01 Lecture 5 Copyright © Mark Meyer Lecture V Higher Level Motion Control CS274: Computer Animation and Simulation.
Trends in Motor Control
Motor Control Theories
Motor control. Importance of motor control All of the “cognition” that we’re interested in must end in behavior— movement. Brain terrain –Where is it/where.
STAGES OF SKILL LEARNING & FACTORS AFFECTING SKILL LEARNING
Basic Concepts The Unified Modeling Language (UML) SYSC System Analysis and Design.
Turvey et al (1982) Notes on general principles of action and control of action.
How does classroom discussion and questioning affect students’ learning?
T for Two: Linear Synergy Advances the Evolution of Directional Pointing Behaviour Marieke Rohde & Ezequiel Di Paolo Centre for Computational Neuroscience.
Motor Control Theories
LEZIONE UNDICI SELF-ORGANIZATION AND EMERGENCE IN DYNAMIC SYSTEMS.
Organization Structure Chapter 08 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Chapter #2: Motor Learning for Effective Coaching and Performance
Ecological Interface Design
By Emilio Dixon. Line  Definition: A line is a mark made by a moving point and having psychological impact according to its direction, weight and the.
- Review oscillations and friction - Study several demonstrations that review the concepts of force, motion and energy TODAY’S OUTCOMES: FORCE, MOTION.
Principles and Practices of Management and Organizational Behavior
Whitman and Atkeson.  Present a decoupled controller for a simulated three-dimensional biped.  Dynamics broke down into multiple subsystems that are.
Tuller, Turvey, Fitch (1982) Coordinative structures - synergies.
1. 1.To obtain knowledge concerning the various organizational structures associated with business. 2.To gain an understanding of each type of organizational.
Demonstration and Verbal Instructions
Dynamics of Bernstein’s Level of Synergies Presentation by Susan & Joaquin.
Synchrony in Social Groups and Its Benefits - By Qi Xuan and Vladimir Filkov Prem Nath Bharti IIT Kanpur 2th November 2014 Prem Nath Bharti (IIT Kanpur)Synchrony.
Illustrations and Answers for TDT4252 exam, June
Observing and Analyzing Performance (1) The Nature of Skills –Movement patterns - a general series of movements having common elements. Ex: running, jumping,
Sensation and Perception Sensory input and Psychophysics.
Skilful Performance.
Deliberate control or tacit control? Explicit/implicit, procedural/declarative, effortful/effortless, etc…
Behavioral Theories of Motor Control
Managing for Quality and Competitiveness
Motor Control Theory Dynamic & Ecological Approaches (Large parts adapted from Wallace, 1993)
Week 2-1: Human Information Processing
Motor Control Theories.  1. The patterning of body and limb motions relative to the patterning of environmental objects and events.
Give examples of the way that virtual reality can be used in Psychology.
© 2008 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 22: Impact KINESIOLOGY Scientific Basis of Human Motion, 11 th edition Hamilton, Weimar.
HFE 760 Virtual Environments Winter 2000 Jennie J. Gallimore
Chapter 4 Motor Control Theories Concept: Theories about how we control coordinated movement differ in terms of the roles of central and environmental.
Chapter 9 Skill Acquisition, Retention, and Transfer
Movement Production and Motor Programs
C.C.C.P Caribbean Coaching Certification Program.
Copyright © 2014 Wolters Kluwer Health | Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Chapter 22: Performance Skills: Implementing Performance Analyses to Evaluate Quality.
The Three Domains of Physical Education. What does Physical Education mean to you?
Methods of Training.
Functionality of objects through observation and Interaction Ruzena Bajcsy based on Luca Bogoni’s Ph.D thesis April 2016.
Turvey Fitch & Tuller (1982)
Motor Learning and Skill acquisition
ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOUR
Information Processing
Demonstration and Verbal Instructions
Fitness Sports Science
Patterns.
Motor Control Theories
Feedback.
Quick Quiz Describe operant conditioning
Motor Skill Learning Dr. Anshul Singh Thapa.
By Cecily flemate Freson pacific University
Presentation transcript:

Fitch, Tuller, Turvey (1982) Tuning of synergies via perception

Focus Questions 1.Describe the use of the terms relational invariance and metrical change on pages Explain the piano roll metaphor. 3.What is exproprioception? 4.What is the important aspect of the use of time-to-contact information in, for example, the timing of a baseball swing? 5.Is time to contact information restricted to vision? Give an example of data supporting your answer. 6.The extensive discussion of the posture and transport systems' interaction, and the continued modification of the region of reversibility, are reminiscent of the discussion of the super-fast movements discussed in last week's lecture. How so? 7.Are the posture and transport systems arranged in a heterarchical or hierarchical manner? 2

Focus Questions 1.Describe the use of the terms relational invariance and metrical change on pages  The relational invariance captures the proportionality of the synergy.  It’s the order parameter  The metrical change captures the change in the absolute force or speed of contractions  It’s the control parameter  E.g. Nashner (1977) and the change in activity at hip, knee, ankle (while proportion stays the same) The change in the metric is “tuning” the synergy. 3

Focus Questions 2.Explain the piano roll metaphor.  Light only allowed through the roll at certain points  Force only permitted/accessed/used by the synergy at certain points  Eg. The Watt governor, the pendulum clock, walking (E3 regulation) 4

Focus Questions 3.What is exproprioception?  Layout of environment in relation to the observer  Proprioception tells us about how our body parts move in relation to each other  Exproprioception tells us how our body parts move in relation to the environment  E.g. swinging room, long jump, gannets, catching balls, hitting dropped balls, playing table tennis, driving, etc. etc…  5

Focus Questions 4.What is the important aspect of the use of time-to- contact information in, for example, the timing of a baseball swing?  Allows regulation of an overall organizational plan (duration of swing) by a changing environmental cue (speed of ball approach)  Same thing has been found in the forehand drive at table tennis, gannet diving, and a whole host of others 6

Focus Questions 5.Is time to contact information restricted to vision? Give an example of data supporting your answer.  No  Same findings for muscular reflexes (falling on hands)  Same findings for different senses (startle response in tactile receptors on the back, facial vision)  Tends to argue that the senses all “talk the same language” 7

Focus Questions 6.The extensive discussion of the posture and transport systems' interaction, and the continued modification of the region of reversibility, are reminiscent of the discussion of the super-fast movements discussed in last week's lecture. How so?  Both Turvey’s description in 1982 and Riley et al’s discussion of 2012 involve very large number of d of f  Both suggest that any tweak of organization is compensated for by the dynamic qualities of the overall synergy  Riley provides evidence that this supercedes the kind of organization possible of a top down controller  The moderation is so quick that it has to be controlled at the level of the synergy 8

Focus Questions 7.Are the posture and transport systems arranged in a heterarchical or hierarchical manner?  No. Massive dynamic interrelation among parts 9

Final note on synergies… 10

Bernstein and Coordination Some principles  Distributed construction of movements  Gradual contribution to movement construction by many subsystems  Indefiniteness of action plans  Same df can be used for different purposes, different df can be used for same purpose  Unlikely that actual use of df is stored as action plans  More likely to be the relation among many parts at the dynamical level 11

Bernstein and Coordination Some principles  Local expediencies  Each subsystem only knows what is has to know, given its relation to other subsystems  Subsystems may relate to each other according to overall rules, but these are dynamical organizations in principle 12 …this Not this…

Bernstein and Coordination Some principles  Separation of activation and tuning  Activation of a coordinated state brings the dynamic relation among the parts to action  Changes to the coordinated state are brought about by “tuning”, via other related subsystems (such as feedback – see time to contact examples)  Executive ignorance  Because of the relation among the subsystems being defined via local knowledge and their dynamics, the means by which they achieve the goal is not known to the executive in detail 13

Bernstein and Coordination Some principles  Reduction of d of f by synergies  Groups of muscles spanning several joints can be constrained to act as though having only one d of f.  Spring model of control  Spring like properties of muscles exploited to use equilibrium point control  Special purpose and task specific solutions capitalizing on real world complexity  Problems of coordination are not universal but are specific to the real world in which the problems are solved  Within that world are invariants and lawful regularities which suggest, or afford, certain solutions. 14

Bernstein and Coordination Some principles  Complementation of the movement system by its environmental context of constraint  The properties of the biological system (body) and those of the environment in which it is embedded are not to be understood on their own Understanding how they relate simplifies the coordination problem. They constrain each other to act only in certain ways  Simultaneous organization of afferentation with efferentation  Principles of movement organization must pay equal attention to coordination through inflow as well as outflow. Through perception as well as action. As above, one will constrain the other. There is mutuality Watt governor again 15

Bernstein and Coordination These principles are now being investigated using two complementary approaches  Physical biology  Nonlinear dissipative thermodynamics  Physics of self-organizing, open, far from equilibrium systems (those that are exchanging energy with systems around them)  Ecological psychology  Perception is specific to information  Information is specific to the environment and one’s movements  Information is the specificity of the structured energy distributions available to the perceptual system For every property perceived there is a property of the structured energy distribution to which the perceived property corresponds. E.g time to contact again! 16

Bernstein and Coordination These principles are now being investigated using two complementary approaches  Goal is to use principles of energy use to understand how dynamic relations among subsystems are regulated, or organized  Phase relationships among body parts  Preferred coordination states  Dynamic interrelationships of body parts with scale independence  And so on… 17

Bernstein and Coordination Take away points  Interrelationships among parts of the system are complex  Lots of specialization at lower levels  It is unlikely that the executive has much detailed knowledge of the detailed working of these parts  What then of instruction?  Words?  Demonstrations?  How should one coach? 18