Effects of External Pacing Type on the Cross-Education of Motor Skill

Justin W. Andrushko, Dakota T. Zirk, Aryan R. Kurniawan, Doug W. Renshaw, Jonathan P. Farthing*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Cross-education (CE) is a phenomenon whereby motor training of one limb leads to improved performance in the opposite untrained limb. External pacing of a motor task can enhance CE; however, the influence of different pacing methods is poorly understood. This study explored how motor training with auditory (AP) and visual pacing (VP) impacts CE with a visuomotor force target task. Sixty-one participants performed a unimanual motor task. Participants were randomized into a visual (n = 31) or auditory (n = 30) pacing stimuli condition. The primary outcome was cumulative error scores for each hand, before and after visuomotor training. Pacing type did not yield different magnitudes of CE. However, after adjusting for baseline differences, a significant hand (trained vs. untrained) × practice side (dominant or non-dominant) interaction (p = .013, ηp2 = .106) and a group main effect (p = .036, ηp2 = .165) were observed. Visual pacing resulted in greater improvements in task performance compared to auditory pacing regardless of hand or practice side, while training the dominant limb resulting in a greater interlimb asymmetry regardless of pacing stimulus. These findings have implications for applying pacing strategies during rehabilitation from unilateral injury or neurological impairment.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1-11
Number of pages11
JournalJournal of Motor Behavior
Early online date19 Aug 2024
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 19 Aug 2024

Keywords

  • inter-limb transfer
  • visuomotor training
  • motor learning
  • entrainment
  • auditory pacing
  • visual pacing

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