In the execution of repetitive tasks, humans can capitalize on experience to improve their motor performance. Prominent examples of this ability can be recognized in our capacity of grasping and manipulating in uncertain conditions. With the aim of providing a mathematical description for such behavior, experiments are considered where participants are required to lift an object with an unexpected mass distribution. By repeating multiple times the same lifting action, participants can learn the correct motor command for task accomplishment. Three models are proposed that combine reactive terms and a learned anticipatory action to explain experimental data. The models feature intratrial and intertrial memory, and the effect of slowly and fas...
abstract: The effect of conflicting sensorimotor memories on optimal force strategies was explored. ...
Contains fulltext : 191807.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Sequential acti...
Learning to control is a complicated process, yet humans seamlessly control various complex movement...
In the execution of repetitive tasks, humans can capitalize on experience to improve their motor per...
While performing repetitive tasks, humans can exploit previous experiences to improve their motor pe...
Current models of motor learning suggest that multiple timescales support adaptation to changes in v...
A remarkable characteristic of our motor system is its enormous capacity for change, manifest in our...
Abstract The human motor control system gracefully behaves in a dynamic and time varying environment...
We studied how subjects learned to make movements against unpredictable perturbations. Twelve health...
A framework is developed to construct computational models of the human motor system (HMS) using var...
Humans can interact with their environment by tuning the properties of the musculoskeletal system to...
Humans and other animals adapt motor commands to predictable disturbances within tens of trials in l...
Humans can interact with their environment by tuning the properties of the musculoskeletal system to...
. A new model of human control skills is proposed and empirically evaluated. It is called the increm...
Abstract When people lift objects of different size but equal weight, they initially employ too much...
abstract: The effect of conflicting sensorimotor memories on optimal force strategies was explored. ...
Contains fulltext : 191807.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Sequential acti...
Learning to control is a complicated process, yet humans seamlessly control various complex movement...
In the execution of repetitive tasks, humans can capitalize on experience to improve their motor per...
While performing repetitive tasks, humans can exploit previous experiences to improve their motor pe...
Current models of motor learning suggest that multiple timescales support adaptation to changes in v...
A remarkable characteristic of our motor system is its enormous capacity for change, manifest in our...
Abstract The human motor control system gracefully behaves in a dynamic and time varying environment...
We studied how subjects learned to make movements against unpredictable perturbations. Twelve health...
A framework is developed to construct computational models of the human motor system (HMS) using var...
Humans can interact with their environment by tuning the properties of the musculoskeletal system to...
Humans and other animals adapt motor commands to predictable disturbances within tens of trials in l...
Humans can interact with their environment by tuning the properties of the musculoskeletal system to...
. A new model of human control skills is proposed and empirically evaluated. It is called the increm...
Abstract When people lift objects of different size but equal weight, they initially employ too much...
abstract: The effect of conflicting sensorimotor memories on optimal force strategies was explored. ...
Contains fulltext : 191807.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Sequential acti...
Learning to control is a complicated process, yet humans seamlessly control various complex movement...