Brain Sciences (May 2024)

Short-Term Reproduction of Active Movement with Visual Feedback and Passive Movement with a Therapist’s Hands

  • Hitoshi Oda,
  • Shiho Fukuda,
  • Ryo Tsujinaka,
  • Han Gao,
  • Koichi Hiraoka

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci14060531
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 6
p. 531

Abstract

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Reproducing instructed movements is crucial for practice in motor learning. In this study, we compared the short-term reproduction of active pelvis movements with visual feedback and passive movement with the therapist’s hands in an upright stance. Sixteen healthy males (M age = 34.1; SD = 10.2 years) participated in this study. In one condition, healthy males maintained an upright stance while a physical therapist moved the participant’s pelvis (passive movement instruction), and in a second condition, the participant actively moved their pelvis with visual feedback of the target and the online trajectory of the center of pressure (active movement instruction). Reproduction errors (displacement of the center of pressure in the medial–lateral axis) 10 s after the passive movement instruction were significantly greater than after the active movement instruction (p p = 0.118). Error of movement reproduction in the anterior–posterior axis after the passive movement instruction was significantly greater than after the active movement instruction, no matter how long the retention interval was between the instruction and reproduction phases (p = 0.025). Taken together, active pelvis movements with visual feedback, rather than passive movement with the therapist’s hand, is better to be used for instructing pelvis movements.

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