Quiz 7: Performance and Motor Control Characteristics of Functional Skills
Health & Kinesiology
Q 1Q 1
Fitts' Law specifies that performance will show a speed-accuracy trade-off in a rapid manual aiming task according to the relationship between which two characteristics of the task?
A) Distance to move and target size
B) Distance to move and movement speed
C) Target size and movement speed
D) Target size and type of target
Free
Multiple Choice
A
Q 2Q 2
The Index of Difficulty (ID) that can be derived from Fitts' law demonstrates that the same task can have various levels of difficulty and the same amount of:
A) Movement speed
B) Response choices
C) Complexity
D) Performance variability
Free
Multiple Choice
C
Q 3Q 3
One of the current views of how we control prehension is that the transport and grasp phases function:
A) As one unit
B) Synergistically
C) As two motor programs
D) Independently
Free
Multiple Choice
B
Q 4Q 4
When you reach to grasp an object, which of the following describes when the fingers begin to close?
A) At a consistent percentage of the total movement time
B) At a point that depends on the total movement time
C) At a point just before contact with the object
D) At contact with the object
Free
Multiple Choice
Q 5Q 5
Consider the following two prehension situations: a person reaches to pick up a cup to: (a) drink from it; (b) move it to a different location on the table. The kinematic characteristics of the transport phase for these two situations would:
A) Be similar
B) Be different
C) Depend on the characteristics of the cup
D) Not be predictable
Free
Multiple Choice
Q 6Q 6
Because we can write our signature relatively legibly with a pen held by either hand, either foot, or even by our teeth, researchers often describe handwriting as a good example of Bernstein's concept of motor:
A) Programs
B) Equivalence
C) Independence
D) Complexity
Free
Multiple Choice
Q 7Q 7
In a two-hand aiming task in which the right hand must move to a target that has an ID of 4, and the left hand must simultaneously move to a target that has an ID of 2, when will each hand arrive at the target?
A) The right hand will arrive much earlier than the left hand
B) The left hand will arrive much earlier than the right hand
C) The two hands will arrive at approximately the same time
D) The preferred hand will arrive first regardless of the ID
Free
Multiple Choice
Q 8Q 8
Which of the following statements reflects the appropriate view of the spatial and temporal control underlying the performance of an asymmetric bimanual action?
A) The two arms prefer to move independently of each other
B) The two arms prefer to move together as one unit
C) The preferred arm always dominates the other arm
D) The two arms cannot perform an asymmetric bimanual action
Free
Multiple Choice
Q 9Q 9
The playing of a guitar is a good example of performing:
A) An asymmetric bimanual skill
B) A symmetric bimanual skill
C) A prehension skill
D) A manual aiming skill
Free
Multiple Choice
Q 10Q 10
The rhythmic structure of the movements involved in gait can be observed:
A) Only in leg movements
B) Only in arm movements
C) In arm and leg movements
D) None of these
Free
Multiple Choice
Q 11Q 11
The three phases of prehension are called the transport phase, the grasp phase, and the ________ phase.
Free
Short Answer
Q 12Q 12
That a person can adapt their handwriting to different surfaces, sizes, forces, etc., is an example of what Bernstein referred to as motor ________.
Free
Short Answer
Q 13Q 13
The term used to describe a bimanual coordination task that requires the two hands to simultaneously perform movements that have the same spatial and temporal characteristics is ________.
Free
Short Answer
Q 14Q 14
A predominant view of gait control is that at the nervous system level, gait is controlled by central pattern ________.
Free
Short Answer
Q 15Q 15
When a person walks or runs, an essential goal of the motor control system is the maintenance of head _______.
Free
Short Answer
Q 16Q 16
According to Fitts' Law, a person's movement time will be faster for a task with an ID of 6 than for an ID of 3.
Free
True False
Q 17Q 17
The kinematic characteristics of a prehension action are the same as those for the actions of reaching or pointing.
Free
True False
Q 18Q 18
Although Fitts' law is based on manual aiming tasks, research has shown that it applies to prehension actions as well.
Free
True False
Free
True False
Q 20Q 20
During the preparation phase of putting a key in a keyhole, you use vision to assess the regulatory conditions.
Free
True False
Q 21Q 21
The reason we have difficulty tapping our head and rubbing our belly at the same time with our two hands is that our motor control system is organized in such a way that our two hands prefer to move in the same ways at the same time.
Free
True False
Q 22Q 22
Central pattern generators, which are involved in the control of gait, are thought to be located primarily in the brain.
Free
True False
Q 23Q 23
The ratios of number of arm swings to leg swings for walking and running are both 1:1 (i.e., one arm swing for one leg swing).
Free
True False
Q 24Q 24
The "atypical" posture and gait characteristics we often observe in children and adults with cerebral palsy can be related to strategies the individuals have developed in order to maintain a stable head position during locomotion.
Free
True False
Q 25Q 25
Gait transitions, from walking to running and running to walking, occur at the same speed for all people.
Free
True False