Orth Dominic, Davids Keith, Chow Jia-Yi, Brymer Eric, Seifert Ludovic
Amsterdam Movement Sciences, Faculty of Behavioural and Movement Sciences, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
Institute of Brain and Behaviour, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
Front Psychol. 2018 Jun 12;9:949. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2018.00949. eCollection 2018.
Extreme climbing where participants perform while knowing that a simple mistake could result in death requires a skill set normally acquired in non-extreme environments. In the ecological dynamics approach to perception and action, skill acquisition involves a process where the existing repertoire of behavioral capabilities (or coordination repertoire) of a learner are destabilized and re-organized through practice-this process can expand the individuals affordance boundaries allowing the individual to explore new environments. Change in coordination repertoire has been observed in bi-manual coordination and postural regulation tasks, where individuals begin practice using one mode of coordination before transitioning to another, more effective, coordination mode during practice. However, individuals may also improve through practice without qualitatively reorganizing movement system components-they do not find a new mode of coordination. To explain these individual differences during learning (i.e., whether or not a new action is discovered), a key candidate is the existing coordination repertoire present prior to practice. In this study, the learning dynamics of body configuration patterns organized with respect to an indoor climbing surface were observed and the existing repertoire of coordination evaluated prior to and after practice. Specifically, performance outcomes and movement patterns of eight beginners were observed across 42 trials of practice over a 7-week period. A pre- and post-test scanning procedure was used to determine existing patterns of movement coordination and the emergence of new movement patterns after the practice period. Data suggested the presence of different learning dynamics by examining trial-to-trial performance in terms of jerk (an indicator of climbing fluency), at the individual level of analysis. The different learning dynamics (identified qualitatively) included: continuous improvement, sudden improvement, and no improvement. Individuals showing sudden improvement appeared to develop a new movement pattern of coordination in terms of their capability to climb using new body-wall orientations, whereas those showing continuous improvement did not, they simply improved performance. The individual who did not improve in terms of jerk, improved in terms of distance climbed. We discuss implications for determining and predicting how individual differences can shape learning dynamics and interact with metastable learning design.
极限攀岩要求参与者在明知一个小失误就可能导致死亡的情况下进行操作,这需要在非极限环境中通常所获得的一套技能。在感知与行动的生态动力学方法中,技能习得涉及一个过程,即学习者现有的行为能力库(或协调能力库)通过练习而被打破稳定并重新组织——这个过程可以扩展个体的可供性边界,使个体能够探索新环境。在双手协调和姿势调节任务中已经观察到协调能力库的变化,在这些任务中,个体开始练习时使用一种协调模式,然后在练习过程中过渡到另一种更有效的协调模式。然而,个体也可能通过练习而提高,却没有从质上重新组织运动系统的组成部分——他们没有找到新的协调模式。为了解释学习过程中的这些个体差异(即是否发现了新的动作),一个关键因素是练习前现有的协调能力库。在本研究中,观察了针对室内攀岩表面所组织的身体构型模式的学习动态,并在练习前后评估了现有的协调能力库。具体而言,在为期7周的时间里,对8名初学者在42次练习试验中的表现结果和运动模式进行了观察。采用测试前和测试后的扫描程序来确定练习前现有的运动协调模式以及练习期后新运动模式的出现情况。通过在个体分析层面上根据急动度(攀岩流畅性的一个指标)检查逐次试验表现,数据表明存在不同的学习动态。定性确定出的不同学习动态包括:持续提高、突然提高和没有提高。表现出突然提高的个体似乎在利用新的身体与岩壁的朝向进行攀爬的能力方面形成了一种新的运动协调模式,而那些表现出持续提高的个体则没有,他们只是提高了表现。在急动度方面没有提高的个体,在攀爬距离方面有所提高。我们讨论了对于确定和预测个体差异如何塑造学习动态以及如何与亚稳定学习设计相互作用的意义。