PLoS Computational Biology (Jan 2023)

Skilled motor control of an inverted pendulum implies low entropy of states but high entropy of actions.

  • Nicola Catenacci Volpi,
  • Martin Greaves,
  • Dari Trendafilov,
  • Christoph Salge,
  • Giovanni Pezzulo,
  • Daniel Polani

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1010810
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 1
p. e1010810

Abstract

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The mastery of skills, such as balancing an inverted pendulum, implies a very accurate control of movements to achieve the task goals. Traditional accounts of skilled action control that focus on either routinization or perceptual control make opposite predictions about the ways we achieve mastery. The notion of routinization emphasizes the decrease of the variance of our actions, whereas the notion of perceptual control emphasizes the decrease of the variance of the states we visit, but not of the actions we execute. Here, we studied how participants managed control tasks of varying levels of difficulty, which consisted of controlling inverted pendulums of different lengths. We used information-theoretic measures to compare the predictions of alternative accounts that focus on routinization and perceptual control, respectively. Our results indicate that the successful performance of the control task strongly correlates with the decrease of state variability and the increase of action variability. As postulated by perceptual control theory, the mastery of skilled pendulum control consists in achieving stable control of goals by flexible means.