Berniker Max, Kording Konrad
Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago, Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Northwestern University, 345 E. Superior Street, ONT-931, Chicago, Illinois 60611, USA.
Nat Neurosci. 2008 Dec;11(12):1454-61. doi: 10.1038/nn.2229. Epub 2008 Nov 16.
Motor adaptation is usually defined as the process by which our nervous system produces accurate movements while the properties of our bodies and our environment continuously change. Many experimental and theoretical studies have characterized this process by assuming that the nervous system uses internal models to compensate for motor errors. Here we extend these approaches and construct a probabilistic model that not only compensates for motor errors but estimates the sources of these errors. These estimates dictate how the nervous system should generalize. For example, estimated changes of limb properties will affect movements across the workspace but not movements with the other limb. We provide evidence that many movement-generalization phenomena emerge from a strategy by which the nervous system estimates the sources of our motor errors.
在我们身体和环境的属性不断变化时,我们的神经系统产生精确的动作。许多实验和理论研究通过假设神经系统使用内部模型来补偿运动误差,对这一过程进行了表征。在这里,我们扩展了这些方法,并构建了一个概率模型,该模型不仅能补偿运动误差,还能估计这些误差的来源。这些估计决定了神经系统应如何进行泛化。例如,肢体属性的估计变化会影响整个工作空间的运动,但不会影响另一肢体的运动。我们提供的证据表明,许多运动泛化现象源自神经系统估计我们运动误差来源的一种策略。