Frontiers in Psychology (Oct 2013)

Neural Model for Learning-to-Learn of Novel Task Sets in the Motor Domain

  • Alex ePitti,
  • Raphael eBraud,
  • Sylvain eMahé,
  • Mathias eQuoy,
  • Philippe eGaussier

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00771
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4

Abstract

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During development, infants learn to differentiate their motor behaviors relative to various contexts by exploring and identifying the correct structures of causes and effects that they can perform; these structures of actions are called task sets or internal models. The ability to detect the structure of new actions, to learn them and to select on the fly the proper one given the current task set is one great leap in infants cognition. This behavior is an important component of the child's ability of learning-to-learn, a mechanism akin to the one of intrinsic motivation that is argued to drive cognitive development. During development, infants learn to differentiate their motor behaviors relative to various contexts by exploring and identifying the correct structures of causes and effects that they can perform; these structures of actions are called task sets or internal models. The ability to detect the structure of new actions, to learn them and to select on the fly the proper one given the current task set is one great leap in infants cognition. This behavior is an important component of the child's ability of learning-to-learn, a mechanism akin to the one of intrinsic motivation that is argued to drive cognitive development.

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