A Hessian-based decomposition characterizes how performance in complex motor skills depends on individual strategy and variability
In complex real-life motor skills such as unconstrained throwing, performance depends on how accurate is on average the outcome of noisy, high-dimensional, and redundant actions. What characteristics of the action distribution relate to performance and how different individuals select specific actio...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1536372021-12-20T07:58:23Z A Hessian-based decomposition characterizes how performance in complex motor skills depends on individual strategy and variability Tommasino, Paolo Maselli, Antonella Campolo, Domenico Lacquaniti, Francesco D'Avella, Andrea School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Engineering::Mechanical engineering Motor Skills motor performance In complex real-life motor skills such as unconstrained throwing, performance depends on how accurate is on average the outcome of noisy, high-dimensional, and redundant actions. What characteristics of the action distribution relate to performance and how different individuals select specific action distributions are key questions in motor control. Previous computational approaches have highlighted that variability along the directions of first order derivatives of the action-to-outcome mapping affects performance the most, that different mean actions may be associated to regions of the actions space with different sensitivity to noise, and that action covariation in addition to noise magnitude matters. However, a method to relate individual high-dimensional action distribution and performance is still missing. Here we introduce a decomposition of performance into a small set of indicators that compactly and directly characterize the key performance-related features of the distribution of high-dimensional redundant actions. Central to the method is the observation that, if performance is quantified as a mean score, the Hessian (second order derivatives) of the action-to-score function determines how the noise of the action distribution affects performance. We can then approximate the mean score as the sum of the score of the mean action and a tolerance-variability index which depends on both Hessian and action covariance. Such index can be expressed as the product of three terms capturing noise magnitude, noise sensitivity, and alignment of the most variable and most noise sensitive directions. We apply this method to the analysis of unconstrained throwing actions by non-expert participants and show that, consistently across four different throwing targets, each participant shows a specific selection of mean action score and tolerance-variability index as well as specific selection of noise magnitude and alignment indicators. Thus, participants with different strategies may display the same performance because they can trade off suboptimal mean action for better tolerance-variability and higher action variability for better alignment with more tolerant directions in action space. Published version European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 644727 to AdA (https://cogimon.eu/cognitiveinteraction-motion-cogimon); Italian Ministry of Health (IRCCS Fondazione Santa Lucia - Ricerca Corrente) to FL (http://www.salute.gov.it/portale/ temi/p2_5.jsp?lingua=italiano&area=Ricerca% 20sanitaria&menu=corrente) Italian Space Agency (grants I/006/06/0 and 2019-11-U.0) to FL (https:// www.asi.it/) Italian University Ministry (PRIN grants 2015HFWRYY to AdA and FL; 2017CBF8NJ_005 to FL; https://prin.miur.it/index. php?pag=2015) The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript. 2021-12-20T07:58:23Z 2021-12-20T07:58:23Z 2021 Journal Article Tommasino, P., Maselli, A., Campolo, D., Lacquaniti, F. & D'Avella, A. (2021). A Hessian-based decomposition characterizes how performance in complex motor skills depends on individual strategy and variability. PloS ONE, 16(6), 0253626-. https://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0253626 1932-6203 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/153637 10.1371/journal.pone.0253626 34191833 2-s2.0-85108917563 6 16 0253626 en PloS ONE © 2021 Tommasino et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. application/pdf |
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Engineering::Mechanical engineering Motor Skills motor performance Tommasino, Paolo Maselli, Antonella Campolo, Domenico Lacquaniti, Francesco D'Avella, Andrea A Hessian-based decomposition characterizes how performance in complex motor skills depends on individual strategy and variability |
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In complex real-life motor skills such as unconstrained throwing, performance depends on how accurate is on average the outcome of noisy, high-dimensional, and redundant actions. What characteristics of the action distribution relate to performance and how different individuals select specific action distributions are key questions in motor control. Previous computational approaches have highlighted that variability along the directions of first order derivatives of the action-to-outcome mapping affects performance the most, that different mean actions may be associated to regions of the actions space with different sensitivity to noise, and that action covariation in addition to noise magnitude matters. However, a method to relate individual high-dimensional action distribution and performance is still missing. Here we introduce a decomposition of performance into a small set of indicators that compactly and directly characterize the key performance-related features of the distribution of high-dimensional redundant actions. Central to the method is the observation that, if performance is quantified as a mean score, the Hessian (second order derivatives) of the action-to-score function determines how the noise of the action distribution affects performance. We can then approximate the mean score as the sum of the score of the mean action and a tolerance-variability index which depends on both Hessian and action covariance. Such index can be expressed as the product of three terms capturing noise magnitude, noise sensitivity, and alignment of the most variable and most noise sensitive directions. We apply this method to the analysis of unconstrained throwing actions by non-expert participants and show that, consistently across four different throwing targets, each participant shows a specific selection of mean action score and tolerance-variability index as well as specific selection of noise magnitude and alignment indicators. Thus, participants with different strategies may display the same performance because they can trade off suboptimal mean action for better tolerance-variability and higher action variability for better alignment with more tolerant directions in action space. |
author2 |
School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering |
author_facet |
School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Tommasino, Paolo Maselli, Antonella Campolo, Domenico Lacquaniti, Francesco D'Avella, Andrea |
format |
Article |
author |
Tommasino, Paolo Maselli, Antonella Campolo, Domenico Lacquaniti, Francesco D'Avella, Andrea |
author_sort |
Tommasino, Paolo |
title |
A Hessian-based decomposition characterizes how performance in complex motor skills depends on individual strategy and variability |
title_short |
A Hessian-based decomposition characterizes how performance in complex motor skills depends on individual strategy and variability |
title_full |
A Hessian-based decomposition characterizes how performance in complex motor skills depends on individual strategy and variability |
title_fullStr |
A Hessian-based decomposition characterizes how performance in complex motor skills depends on individual strategy and variability |
title_full_unstemmed |
A Hessian-based decomposition characterizes how performance in complex motor skills depends on individual strategy and variability |
title_sort |
hessian-based decomposition characterizes how performance in complex motor skills depends on individual strategy and variability |
publishDate |
2021 |
url |
https://hdl.handle.net/10356/153637 |
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1720447092725383168 |