875 resultados para Aimed Movements


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Como crítica à perspectiva da Educação Física Escolar (EFE) voltada à aptidão física e ao desenvolvimento técnico-esportivo, tão comum até a década de 1970, surgem, a partir da década de 1980, novas propostas de ensino que a aproximariam dos reais objetivos da escola é o que se chama de movimento renovador da EFE. Ao longo dos anos, essas propostas foram incorporadas aos cursos de graduação, de pós-graduação e aos documentos oficiais de ensino. Era de se esperar que as aulas de EFE nas escolas brasileiras, hoje, representassem, hegemonicamente, as propostas do movimento renovador, mas paradoxalmente temos visto intervenções difusas e até aleatórias, muitas vezes representadas pelo rola a bola. Diante da necessidade de investir em práticas renovadoras e a fim de abolir o caráter de estudos que apenas pomovem denúncias de práticas caducas, este estudo buscou professores que, alinhados aos conhecimentos renovadores, procuram desenvolver aulas de EFE que se aproximam e representam tais conhecimentos didático-metodológicos. Assim, buscou-se investigar a influência do movimento renovador na intervenção pedagógica de cinco professores de Educação Física da rede municipal de ensino do Rio de Janeiro. O estudo divide-se em três artigos complementares. O primeiro traz a problematização e a revisão bibliográfica. O segundo busca identificar o que os professores pensam acerca do movimento renovador, bem como analisar características acadêmicas e profissionais-interventivas. Os resultados do artigo 2 apontam que os professores parecem conhecer, se alinham e afirmam ministrar aulas em acordo com as propostas renovadoras, mas possuem ambientes e condições de trabalho distintas. O terceiro artigo traz a análise de 20 aulas de EFE dos cinco professores, a partir de uma ficha de observação sistemática composta por indicadores didático-metodológicos sugeridos por Resende e Nascimento (2004), além da discussão de uma entrevista sobre questões didáticas e metodológicas e críticas às intervenções. Percebeu-se que, apesar de intervenções com características distintas, a maioria das ações intervetivas se aproximou dos indicadores nas categorias planejamento, objetivo, conteúdo, método, avaliação e relação professor-aluno. Todos os professores fizeram críticas às aulas, acreditando que estas deveriam ser melhores e diferentes do que frequentemente são, o que representa limitações do campo interventivo e o compromisso dos professores com a qualidade da intervenção. Acredita-se que os dados deste estudo representam mais um pequeno passo às discussões e construções de práticas renovadoras no campo da EFE, ao buscar e apontar possibilidades, limitações e exemplos de ações didáticas concretas do cotidiano.

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Rhythmic and discrete arm movements occur ubiquitously in everyday life, and there is a debate as to whether these two classes of movements arise from the same or different underlying neural mechanisms. Here we examine interference in a motor-learning paradigm to test whether rhythmic and discrete movements employ at least partially separate neural representations. Subjects were required to make circular movements of their right hand while they were exposed to a velocity-dependent force field that perturbed the circularity of the movement path. The direction of the force-field perturbation reversed at the end of each block of 20 revolutions. When subjects made only rhythmic or only discrete circular movements, interference was observed when switching between the two opposing force fields. However, when subjects alternated between blocks of rhythmic and discrete movements, such that each was uniquely associated with one of the perturbation directions, interference was significantly reduced. Only in this case did subjects learn to corepresent the two opposing perturbations, suggesting that different neural resources were employed for the two movement types. Our results provide further evidence that rhythmic and discrete movements employ at least partially separate control mechanisms in the motor system.

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Human subjects easily adapt to single dynamic or visuomotor perturbations. In contrast, when two opposing dynamic or visuomotor perturbations are presented sequentially, interference is often observed. We examined the effect of bimanual movement context on interference between opposing perturbations using pairs of contexts, in which the relative direction of movement between the two arms was different across the pair. When each perturbation direction was associated with a different bimanual context, such as movement of the arms in the same direction versus movement in the opposite direction, interference was dramatically reduced. This occurred over a short period of training and was seen for both dynamic and visuomotor perturbations, suggesting a partitioning of motor learning for the different bimanual contexts. Further support for this was found in a series of transfer experiments. Having learned a single dynamic or visuomotor perturbation in one bimanual context, subjects showed incomplete transfer of this learning when the context changed, even though the perturbation remained the same. In addition, we examined a bimanual context in which one arm was moved passively and show that the reduction in interference requires active movement. The sensory consequences of movement are thus insufficient to allow opposing perturbations to be co-represented. Our results suggest different bimanual movement contexts engage at least partially separate representations of dynamics and kinematics in the motor system.

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Black Sea Bass (Centropristis striata) in the mid-Atlantic Bight undertake seasonal cross-shelf movements to occupy inshore rocky reefs and hardbottom habitats between spring and fall. Shelf-wide migrations of this stock are well documented, but movements and home ranges of fish during their inshore residency period have not been described. We tagged 122 Black Sea Bass with acoustic transmitters at a mid-Atlantic reef to estimate home-range size and factors that influence movements (>400 m) at a 46.1-km2 study site between May and November 2003. Activity of Black Sea Bass was greatest and most consistent during summer but declined rapidly in September as water temperatures at the bottom of the seafloor increased on the inner shelf. Black Sea Bass maintained relatively large home ranges that were fish-size invariant but highly variable (13.7–736.4 ha), underscoring the importance of large sample sizes in examination of population-level characteristics of mobile species with complex social interactions. On the basis of observed variations in movement patterns and the size of home ranges, we postulate the existence of groups of conspecifics that exhibit similar space-use behaviors. The group of males released earlier in the tagging period used larger home ranges than the group of males released later in our study. In addition, mean activity levels and the probability of movement among acoustic stations varied among groups of fish in a complex manner that depended on sex. These differences in movement behaviors may increase the vulnerability of male fish to passive fishing gears, further exacerbating variation in exploitation rates for this species among reefs.

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Humans use their arms to engage in a wide variety of motor tasks during everyday life. However, little is known about the statistics of these natural arm movements. Studies of the sensory system have shown that the statistics of sensory inputs are key to determining sensory processing. We hypothesized that the statistics of natural everyday movements may, in a similar way, influence motor performance as measured in laboratory-based tasks. We developed a portable motion-tracking system that could be worn by subjects as they went about their daily routine outside of a laboratory setting. We found that the well-documented symmetry bias is reflected in the relative incidence of movements made during everyday tasks. Specifically, symmetric and antisymmetric movements are predominant at low frequencies, whereas only symmetric movements are predominant at high frequencies. Moreover, the statistics of natural movements, that is, their relative incidence, correlated with subjects' performance on a laboratory-based phase-tracking task. These results provide a link between natural movement statistics and motor performance and confirm that the symmetry bias documented in laboratory studies is a natural feature of human movement.