Department of Psychology, Spelman College.
Motor Behavior Laboratory (LACOM), School of Physical Education and Sport, University of São Paulo, Brazil.
Monogr Soc Res Child Dev. 2019 Jun;84(2):7-147. doi: 10.1111/mono.12405.
As one of the hallmarks of human activity and cultural achievement, bimanual coordination has been the focus of research efforts in multiple fields of inquiry. Since the seminal work of Cohen (1971) and Kelso and colleagues (Haken, Kelso, & Bunz, 1985; Kelso, Southard, & Goodman, 1979), bimanual action has served as a model system used to investigate the role of cortical, perceptual, cognitive, and situational underpinnings of coordinated movement sequences (e.g., Bingham, 2004; Oliveira & Ivry, 2008). This work has been guided primarily by dynamical systems theory in general, and by the formal Haken-Kelso-Bunz (HKB; 1985) model of bimanual coordination, in particular. The HKB model describes the self-organizing relationship between a coordinated movement pattern and the underlying parameters that support that pattern, and can also be used to conceptualize and test predictions of how changes in coordination occur. Much of the work investigating bimanual control under the HKB model has been conducted with adults who are acting over time periods of a few seconds to a few days. However, there are also changes in bimanual control that occur over far longer time spans, including those that emerge across childhood and into adolescence (e.g., Wolff, Kotwica, & Obregon, 1998). Using the formal HKB model as a starting point, we analyzed the ontogenetic emergence of a particular pattern of bimanual coordination, specifically, the anti-phase (or inverse oscillatory motion) coordination pattern between the upper limbs in toddlers who are performing a drumming task (see Brakke, Fragaszy, Simpson, Hoy, & Cummins-Sebree, 2007). This study represents a first attempt to document the emergence of the anti-phase pattern by examining both microgenetic and ontogenetic patterns of change in bimanual activity. We report the results of a longitudinal study in which seven toddlers engaged monthly in a bimanual drumming task from 15 to 27 months of age. On some trials, an adult modeled in-phase or anti-phase action; on other trials, no action was modeled. We documented the motion dynamics accompanying the emergence of the anti-phase bimanual coordination pattern by assessing bout-to-bout and month-to-month changes in several movement parameters-oscillation frequency, amplitude ratio of the drumsticks, initial position of the limbs to begin bouts, and primary arm-joint involvement. These parameters provided a good starting point to understand how toddlers explore movement space in order to achieve greater stability in performing the anti-phase coordination pattern. Trained research assistants used Motus software to isolate each bout of drumming and to digitize the movement of the two drumstick heads relative to the stationary drum surface. Because we were primarily interested in the vertical movement of the drumsticks that were held in the child's hands, we relied on two-dimensional analyses and analyzed data that were tracked by a single camera. We used linear mixed effects analyses as well as qualitative analyses for each participant to help elucidate the emergence and stability of the child's use of anti-phase coordination. This approach facilitated descriptions of individual pathways of behavior that are possible only with longitudinal designs such as the one used here. Our analyses indicated that toddlers who were learning to produce anti-phase motion in this context employed a variety of strategies to adjust the topography of their action. Specifically, as we hypothesized, toddlers differentially exploited oscillation frequency and movement amplitude to support change to anti-phase action, which briefly appeared as early as 15 months of age but did not become relatively stable until approximately 20 months of age. We found evidence that many toddlers reduced oscillation frequency before transitioning from in-phase to anti-phase drumming. Toddlers also used different means of momentarily modulating the amplitude ratio between limbs to allow a change in coordination from in-phase to anti-phase. Nevertheless, these oscillation-frequency and amplitude-ratio strategies were interspersed by periods of nonsystematic exploration both within and between bouts of practice. We also observed that toddlers sometimes changed their initial limb positions to start a bout or altered which primary arm joints they used when drumming. When they enacted these changes, the toddlers increased performance of the anti-phase coordination pattern in their drumming. However, we found no evidence of systematic exploration with these changes in limb position and joint employment, suggesting that the toddlers did not intentionally employ these strategies to improve their performance on the task. Although bimanual drumming represents a highly specific behavior, our examination of the mechanisms underlying emergence of the anti-phase coordination pattern in this context is one of the missing pieces needed to understand the development of motor coordination more broadly. Our results document that the anti-phase coordination pattern emerges and stabilizes through modulation of the dynamics of the movement and change of the attractor landscape (i.e., the motor repertoire). Consistent with literatures in motor control, motor learning, and skill development, our results suggest that the acquisition of movements in ontogenetic development can be thought of as exploration of the emergent dynamics of perception and action. This conclusion is commensurate with a systemic approach to motor development in which functional dynamics, rather than specific structures, provide the basis for understanding developmental changes in skill. Based on our results as well as the relevant previous empirical literature, we present a conceptual model that incorporates developmental dynamics into the HKB model. This conceptual model calls for new investigations using a dynamical systems approach that allows direct control of movement parameters, and that builds on the methods and phenomena that we have described in the current work.
作为人类活动和文化成就的标志之一,双手协调一直是多个研究领域的研究重点。自 Cohen(1971)和 Kelso 及其同事(Haken、Kelso 和 Bunz,1985;Kelso、Southard 和 Goodman,1979)的开创性工作以来,双手动作一直是一个模型系统,用于研究皮质、感知、认知和情境基础对协调运动序列的作用(例如,Bingham,2004;Oliveira 和 Ivry,2008)。这项工作主要以一般的动力系统理论为指导,特别是以双手协调的正式 Haken-Kelso-Bunz(HKB;1985)模型为指导。HKB 模型描述了协调运动模式与其支持该模式的基础参数之间的自组织关系,也可以用于概念化和测试协调变化的发生方式。在 HKB 模型下研究双手控制的大部分工作都是在成年人中进行的,他们的动作时间跨度从几秒钟到几天不等。然而,也有一些双手控制的变化发生在更长的时间跨度内,包括在儿童期和青春期出现的变化(例如,Wolff、Kotwica 和 Obregon,1998)。我们使用正式的 HKB 模型作为起点,分析了一种特定的双手协调模式的发生发展,即幼儿在进行击鼓任务时上肢之间的反相(或反向振荡运动)协调模式(参见 Brakke、Fragaszy、Simpson、Hoy 和 Cummins-Sebree,2007)。这项研究代表了首次通过检查双手活动的微观发生和发生变化模式来记录反相模式的出现。我们报告了一项纵向研究的结果,该研究中 7 名幼儿在 15 至 27 个月大时每月进行一次双手击鼓任务。在一些试验中,成年人示范同相或反相动作;在其他试验中,没有示范动作。我们通过评估每次击球和每月的几个运动参数的变化来记录反相双手协调模式的出现,这些参数包括:振荡频率、鼓棒振幅比、肢体开始击球的初始位置以及主要关节的参与。这些参数为了解幼儿如何探索运动空间以在执行反相协调模式时获得更大的稳定性提供了一个良好的起点。经过培训的研究助理使用 Motus 软件隔离每次击鼓的回合,并数字化固定鼓面相对的两个鼓棒头的运动。由于我们主要对幼儿手中持有的鼓棒的垂直运动感兴趣,因此我们依赖于二维分析并分析了由单个摄像机跟踪的数据。我们使用线性混合效应分析以及每个参与者的定性分析来帮助阐明儿童使用反相协调的出现和稳定性。这种方法有助于描述只有使用纵向设计(如这里使用的设计)才可能出现的个体行为途径。我们的分析表明,在这种情况下学习产生反相运动的幼儿采用了多种策略来调整他们的动作地形。具体来说,正如我们假设的那样,幼儿通过改变振荡频率和运动幅度来调整动作,以支持从同相到反相动作的变化,这种变化早在 15 个月大时就短暂出现,但直到大约 20 个月大时才变得相对稳定。我们发现许多幼儿在从同相过渡到反相击鼓之前会降低振荡频率。幼儿还使用不同的方法暂时调节肢体之间的振幅比,以允许协调从同相变为反相。然而,这些振荡频率和振幅比策略在练习回合内和回合之间的非系统探索之间交错出现。我们还观察到,幼儿有时会改变开始回合的肢体位置,或者改变击鼓时使用的主要关节。当他们执行这些变化时,幼儿在击鼓时提高了反相协调模式的表现。然而,我们没有发现这些肢体位置和关节使用变化的系统探索的证据,这表明幼儿并没有有意地使用这些策略来提高他们在任务上的表现。虽然双手击鼓代表一种高度特定的行为,但我们对这种情况下反相协调模式出现的机制的研究是更广泛地理解运动协调发展的缺失部分之一。我们的研究结果表明,反相协调模式通过运动的动力学调制和吸引子景观(即运动技能库)的变化而出现并稳定下来。与运动控制、运动学习和技能发展的文献一致,我们的研究结果表明,在个体发育过程中获得运动可以被视为对感知和运动的新兴动力学的探索。这个结论与系统的运动发展方法是一致的,在这种方法中,功能动力学而不是特定的结构为理解技能的发展变化提供了基础。基于我们的研究结果以及相关的先前实证文献,我们提出了一个概念模型,该模型将发展动态纳入 HKB 模型。这个概念模型呼吁使用动力系统方法进行新的研究,该方法允许直接控制运动参数,并基于我们在当前工作中描述的方法和现象。