Hermer-Vazquez Linda, Moshtagh Nasim
Psychology Department, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611, United States.
Behav Processes. 2009 May;81(1):50-9. doi: 10.1016/j.beproc.2008.12.022. Epub 2009 Jan 17.
Recent behavioral and neural evidence has suggested that ethologically relevant sub-movements (movement primitives) are used by primates for more complex motor skill learning. These primitives include extending the hand, grasping an object, and holding food while moving it toward the mouth. In prior experiments with rats performing a reach-to-grasp-food task, we observed that especially during early task learning, rats appeared to have movement primitives similar to those seen in primates. Unlike primates, however, during task learning the rats performed these sub-movements in a disordered manner not seen in humans or macaques, e.g. with the rat chewing before placing the food pellet in its mouth. Here, in two experiments, we tested the hypothesis that for rats, learning this ecologically relevant skill involved learning to concatenate the sub-movements in the correct order. The results confirmed our initial observations, and suggested that several aspects of forepaw/hand use, taken for granted in primate studies, must be learned by rats to perform a logically connected and seemingly ecologically important series of sub-movements. We discuss our results from a comparative and evolutionary perspective.
最近的行为和神经学证据表明,灵长类动物会利用与行为学相关的子动作(动作基元)来学习更复杂的运动技能。这些动作基元包括伸手、抓取物体以及在将食物移向嘴巴的同时握住食物。在之前对大鼠进行的一项伸手抓取食物任务的实验中,我们观察到,特别是在任务学习的早期阶段,大鼠似乎具有与灵长类动物相似的动作基元。然而,与灵长类动物不同的是,在任务学习过程中,大鼠执行这些子动作的方式杂乱无章,这在人类或猕猴中并未出现,例如大鼠在将食物颗粒放入口中之前就开始咀嚼。在此,我们通过两项实验检验了一个假设,即对于大鼠来说,学习这种与生态相关的技能需要学习以正确的顺序连接子动作。结果证实了我们最初的观察结果,并表明在灵长类动物研究中被视为理所当然的前爪/手部使用的几个方面,大鼠必须通过学习才能执行一系列逻辑连贯且看似具有生态重要性的子动作。我们从比较和进化的角度讨论了我们的结果。