Schugens Markus M., Breitenstein Caterina, Ackermann Hermann, Daum Irene
Neuropsychology, Faculty of Psychology, Ruhr-University of Bochum, Germany.
Behav Neurol. 1998;11(3):149-157.
Motor skill acquisition was investigated in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) or cerebellar dysfunction using two sensory-guided tracking tasks. The subjects had to learn to track a visual target (a square) on a computer screen by moving a joystick under two different conditions. In the unreversed task, the horizontal target movements were semi-predictable and could be anticipated. In the reversed task, the horizontal movements of a pointer which had to be kept within the target square were mirror-reversed to the joystick movements. PD patients showed intact learning of the semi-predictable task and reduced learning of the mirror-reversed task; patients with cerebellar dysfunction showed the opposite pattern. These findings are discussed in relation to the differential contribution of the cerebellum and the striatum to motor skill acquisition: the cerebellum appears to participate in the implementation of anticipatory movements, whereas the striatum may be critically involved in types of motor learning which require a high degree of internal elaboration.
使用两项感官引导的追踪任务,对帕金森病(PD)患者或小脑功能障碍患者的运动技能习得情况进行了研究。受试者必须在两种不同条件下通过移动操纵杆来学习在电脑屏幕上追踪一个视觉目标(一个正方形)。在非反转任务中,水平目标运动具有半可预测性且可以被预期。在反转任务中,必须保持在目标正方形内的指针的水平运动与操纵杆运动呈镜像反转。帕金森病患者在半可预测任务中表现出正常的学习能力,而在镜像反转任务中的学习能力下降;小脑功能障碍患者则表现出相反的模式。结合小脑和纹状体对运动技能习得的不同贡献对这些发现进行了讨论:小脑似乎参与了预期运动的执行,而纹状体可能在需要高度内部加工的运动学习类型中起关键作用。