@inbook{e248895bc4044a0092aa52270b638fe3,
title = "Influence of curriculum structure on early skill learning during a virtual throwing task",
abstract = "Perceptual-motor tasks offer redundant solutions to achieve a goal. However, not all solutions are equally robust to error-producing variability and thus, skill learning requires the search for behaviors that are error-tolerant. Throwing a ball to hit a target is a skill that has been studied via the “skittles” task, a simplified 2-dimensional throwing environment. The study investigated whether participants learning the skittles task benefit from task scaffolding via the placements of targets provided by either a human confederate posing as a teacher, or by the participant. These groups were compared to a third sample who received an unstructured curriculum consisting of randomly placed targets. The results demonstrate that participants in the unstructured training condition were better able to perceive the task{\textquoteright}s underlying solution geometry, compared to scaffolding provided by a human. Future work will explore methods to design training curricula that are more efficient in facilitating perceptual-motor skill development.",
author = "Bec Frater-Baird and Gaurav Patil and Michael Richardson and Patrick Nalepka",
note = "Copyright the Author(s) 2023. Version archived for private and non-commercial use with the permission of the author/s and according to publisher conditions. For further rights please contact the publisher.; Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society (45th : 2023) ; Conference date: 26-07-2023 Through 29-07-2023",
year = "2023",
language = "English",
series = "Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society",
publisher = "Cognitive Science Society",
pages = "3718",
editor = "M. Goldwater and Anggoro, {F. K.} and Hayes, {B. K.} and Ong, {D. C.}",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the 45th Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society",
}