Sakai Katsuyuki, Hikosaka Okihide, Nakamura Kae
Department of Cognitive Neuroscience, Graduate School of Medicine, The University of Tokyo, 7-3-1 Hongo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113-0033, Japan.
Trends Cogn Sci. 2004 Dec;8(12):547-53. doi: 10.1016/j.tics.2004.10.005.
Complex motor skill often consists of a fixed sequence of movements. Recent studies show that a stereotyped temporal pattern or rhythm emerges as we learn to perform a motor sequence. This is because the sequence is reorganized during learning as serial chunks of movements in both a sequence-specific and subject-specific manner. On the basis of human imaging studies we propose that the formation of chunk patterns is controlled by the cerebellum, its posterior and anterior lobes contributing, respectively, to the temporal patterns before and after chunk formation. The motor rhythm can assist the motor networks in the cerebral cortex to control automatic movements within chunks and the cognitive networks to control non-automatic movements between chunks, respectively. In this way, organized motor skill can be performed automatically and flexibly.
复杂运动技能通常由一系列固定的动作组成。最近的研究表明,当我们学习执行一个运动序列时,会出现一种刻板的时间模式或节奏。这是因为在学习过程中,序列会以序列特定和个体特定的方式作为一系列动作块进行重新组织。基于人体成像研究,我们提出动作块模式的形成由小脑控制,其前叶和后叶分别对动作块形成之前和之后的时间模式起作用。运动节奏可以分别协助大脑皮层中的运动网络控制动作块内的自动运动以及认知网络控制动作块之间的非自动运动。通过这种方式,可以自动且灵活地执行有组织的运动技能。