Intro to Motor Learning
Task Types
Practice Conditions
Types of Feedback
Stages of Motor Learning
100

Cognitive, Associative & Autonomous

The 3 stages of motor learning


 

100

task with a clear beginning and end

discrete task

100

Practice condition in which a skill is repeated in its entirety

Whole (task practice)

100

feedback that involves rewards or encouragement 

Reinforcement

100

at this stage, learners need to invest significant mental effort and may get frustrated easily

Cognitive

200

This principle of motor learning describes the information that will guide the learner

Type of feedback

200

tasks performed in dynamic, unpredictable environments where the performer must adapt to changing conditions

open tasks

200

Practice condition in which a skill is repeated continuously for a period of time with limited rests


Massed practice

.

200

feedback that is supplemental and provided by means other than the task itself

Extrinsic
200

at this stage, learners are refining their skills and performance becomes more consistent

Associative

300

This principle of motor learning involves the when, where, and how of the intervention

Optimal practice conditions

300
task with unclear beginning & end; often rhythmical or repetitious

continuous task

300

practice condition characterized by multiple repetitions for a short period of time with low contextual interference; the practice environment is fairly stable & predictable

Blocked practice

300

Natural consequences of task performance; often comes via sensory systems (visual, auditory, tacile, proprioceptive)

Intrinsic
300

at this stage of motor learning, interventions (practice conditions) should emphasize progressing task demands

Associative

400

This principle of motor learning involves the characteristics of the action or actions to be learned

Task specificity

400

series of linked discrete tasks, specifically those where the sequence matters

serial tasks

400

practice condition characterized by high contextual interference; there are frequent changes in the sequence or environment

Random


400

feedback that targets the outcome of the movement

knowledge of results

400

at this stage of motor learning, interventions (practice conditions) should emphasize success and erroless learning

Cognitive

500

This principle of motor learning is specific to or a characteristic of the client

Stage of the Learner

500

tasks/skills which are performed in a stationary environment, where the performer chooses when to start; typically, easier to perform as they involve less variability and complexity

closed tasks

500

practice structure where more breaks are given in between the repetitions; more effective for learning complex tasks

Distributive practice

500

feedback that targets the characteristics or nature of the movement

knowledge of performance

500

at this stage, movements require limited conscious thought and can be applied real-world situations

Autonomous

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