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Self-controlled KR schedules: Does repetition...
Journal article

Self-controlled KR schedules: Does repetition order matter?

Abstract

The impact of an experimenter-defined repetition schedule on the utility of a self-controlled KR context during motor skill acquisition was examined. Participants were required to learn three novel spatial-temporal tasks in either a random or blocked repetition schedule with or without the opportunity to control their KR. Results from the retention period showed that participants provided control over their KR schedule in a random repetition schedule demonstrated superior learning. However, performance measures from the transfer test showed that, independent of repetition schedule, learners provided the opportunity to control their KR schedule demonstrated superior transfer performance compared to their yoked counterparts. The dissociated impact of repetition schedule and self-controlled KR schedules on retention and transfer is discussed.

Authors

Patterson JT; Carter MJ; Hansen S

Journal

Human Movement Science, Vol. 32, No. 4, pp. 567–579

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

August 1, 2013

DOI

10.1016/j.humov.2013.03.005

ISSN

0167-9457

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