RT - Journal Article T1 - Effects of Limb-Specific Fatigue on Motor Learning during an Upper Extremity Proprioceptive Task JF - ijmcl YR - 2019 JO - ijmcl VO - 1 IS - 2 UR - http://ijmcl.com/article-1-29-en.html SP - 41 EP - 46 K1 - Motor control K1 - Acquisition K1 - Retention K1 - Motor skills AB - Background: The effects of limb-specific fatigue on motor skill acquisition and retention are not clear. Objective: To investigate the impact of limb-specific fatigue on the acquisition and retention of an upper extremity proprioceptive task. Methods: Twenty-two right-handed participants were randomly and equally assigned to either fatigued or non-fatigued protocols. Acquisition phase for the upper extremity task consisted of 5 blocks each with 12 trials. After 48 hours, all participants performed 1 block retention test (12 trials) with the left arm followed by 1 block transfer test (12 trials) with the right arm. Performance for each block was analyzed using a one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA). Performance differences between groups for the acquisition was analyzed using a 2 x 5 (group x block) ANOVA with repeated measures on the blocks. The performance on retention-transfer was analyzed by separate ANOVAs. Statistical significance set at p < .05. Results: The fatigued condition displayed significantly more E than the non-fatigue group (p < .05). During retention and transfer, the fatigue group again displayed higher E compared to the non-fatigued group (p < .05). Conclusion: The results of this study support that limb-specific fatigue may produce performance deficits during acquisition and interfere with motor skill retention. LA eng UL http://ijmcl.com/article-1-29-en.html M3 10.29252/ijmcl.1.1.76 ER -