Manipulating Generalized Motor Program Difficulty during Blocked and Random Practice Does Not Affect Parameter Learning
- 1 March 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport
- Vol. 72 (1) , 32-38
- https://doi.org/10.1080/02701367.2001.10608929
Abstract
Blocked practice engenders more trial-to-trial response stability, which is thought to be crucial for developing the generalized motor program (GMP) but not parameter learning (Lai, Shea, Wulf, & Wright, 2000). It was hypothesized that reducing the difficulty of the GMP might permit additional cognitive resources to be allocated to learning the parameter requirements. However, GMP theory maintains the independence of the memories governing the GMP and parameters. This notion suggests that manipulating the difficulty of the GMP should have no effect on the blocked practice participant's ability to successfully specify the appropriate parameters. Participants learned a simple or complex relative timing pattern under either blocked or random practice conditions. Smaller GMP errors were exhibited for the simple relative timing patterns, but this was not associated with improvements in parameter specification following blocked practice. A clear advantage for parameter specification was evident in transfer following random practice. Taken together, these data support the theoretical separation of the GMP and parameter processes.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Optimizing Generalized Motor Program and Parameter LearningResearch Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 2000
- The Role of Reduced Frequency of Knowledge of Results during Constant PracticeResearch Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 1999
- A Theoretical and Empirical Review of the Contextual Interference Effect and the Learning of Motor SkillsQuest, 1998
- Generalized Motor Program (GMP) Learning: Effects of Reduced Frequency of Knowledge of Results and Practice VariabilityJournal of Motor Behavior, 1998
- Bandwidth Knowledge of Results and Motor Learning: More than Just a Relative Frequency EffectThe Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology Section A, 1990
- The Acquisition of Time Properties Associated with a Sequential Motor SkillJournal of Motor Behavior, 1984
- On the Space-Time Structure of Human Interlimb Co-OrdinationThe Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology Section A, 1983
- Skill Acquisition: An Event Approach with Special Reference to Searching for the Optimum of a Function of Several VariablesPublished by Elsevier ,1978
- A Working Model of Skill Acquisition with Application to TeachingQuest, 1972
- A brief statement of schema theoryPsychonomic Science, 1967