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ARTICLES DE PERIODIQUES

Juggling and bouncing balls : parallels and differences in dynamic concepts and tools

Sternad, Dagmar
1999

Two lines of research on the related skills of rhythmic bouncing a ball and juggling three balls were reviewed with the goal to reveal commonalities in the strategy typifying the dynamic systems approach to movement coordination. For both lines of research concepts from nonlinear dynamics and their experimental results were presented in parallel. While there were evident differences in the physical principles and key variables, the dual presentation demonstrated the similarity in the modeling strategy and the methodology. Criteria for dynamically stable solutions defined the boundaries that the actor's movements had to satisfy in order to perform the rhythmic task. Essential in both approaches was that one key variable provided the reference frame for evaluating skilled performance and the process of learning. The role of perceptual information was evaluated by the decrement in stability of performance that selected perceptual manipulations induced. Individual differences between subjects in ball bouncing were shown to be the consequence of their choice of the key variable, which further constrained the kinematic properties across different movement realizations. Individual differences between expert jugglers were interpreted as their "deliberate" choice of a solution that was not tightly constrained by maximum stability but rather one that afforded them more flexibility. This contrasting review aimed to show the spectrum of tools that a dynamic approach has to offer. It further showed that an analysis from a nonlinear dynamic perspective can establish a basis from which a set of important issues in motor control can be addressed, in a quantitative and physically principled manner. [author summary]
Two lines of research on the related skills of rhythmic bouncing a ball and juggling three balls were reviewed with the goal to reveal commonalities in the strategy typifying the dynamic systems approach to movement coordination. For both lines of research concepts from nonlinear dynamics and their experimental results were presented in parallel. While there were evident differences in the physical principles and key variables, the dual ...


Cote : 793.870 15 S8396j 1999

  • Ex. 1 — Consultation sur place
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ARTICLES DE PERIODIQUES

One-handed juggling : a dynamical approach to a rhythmic movement task

Schaal, Stefan ; Sternad, Dagmar ; Atkeson, Christopher G.
1996

The skill of rhythmically juggling a ball on a racket was investigated from the viewpoint of nonlinear dynamics. The difference equations that model the dynamical system were analyzed by means of local and nonlocal stability analyses. These analyses showed that the task dynamics offer an economical juggling pattern that is stable even for open-loop actuator motion. For this pattern, two types of predictions were extracted: (a) Stable periodic bouncing is sufficiently characterized by a negative acceleration of the racket at the moment of impact with the ball, and (b) a nonlinear scaling relation maps different juggling trajectories onto one topologically equivalent dynamical system. The relevance of these results for the human control of action was evaluated in an experiment in which subjects (N = 6) performed a comparable task of juggling a ball on a paddle. Task manipulations involved different juggling heights and gravity conditions of the ball. The following predictions were confirmed: (a) For stable rhythmic performance, the paddle's acceleration at impact is negative and fluctuations of the impact acceleration follow predictions from global stability analysis; and (b) for each subject, the realizations of juggling for the different experimental conditions are related by the scaling relation. These results permit one to conclude that humans reliably exploit the stable solutions inherent to the dynamics of the given task and do not overrule these dynamics by other control mechanisms. The dynamical scaling serves as an efficient principle for generating different movement realizations from only a few parameter changes and is discussed as a dynamical formalization of the principle of motor equivalence. [authors summary]
The skill of rhythmically juggling a ball on a racket was investigated from the viewpoint of nonlinear dynamics. The difference equations that model the dynamical system were analyzed by means of local and nonlocal stability analyses. These analyses showed that the task dynamics offer an economical juggling pattern that is stable even for open-loop actuator motion. For this pattern, two types of predictions were extracted: (a) Stable periodic ...


Cote : 793.870 15 S2912o 1996

  • Ex. 1 — Consultation sur place

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