Department of Biomedical Engineering, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21205, USA.
J Neurosci. 2010 Nov 3;30(44):14817-23. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4160-10.2010.
The neural systems that support motor adaptation in humans are thought to be distinct from those that support the declarative system. Yet, during motor adaptation changes in motor commands are supported by a fast adaptive process that has important properties (rapid learning, fast decay) that are usually associated with the declarative system. The fast process can be contrasted to a slow adaptive process that also supports motor memory, but learns gradually and shows resistance to forgetting. Here we show that after people stop performing a motor task, the fast motor memory can be disrupted by a task that engages declarative memory, but the slow motor memory is immune from this interference. Furthermore, we find that the fast/declarative component plays a major role in the consolidation of the slow motor memory. Because of the competitive nature of declarative and nondeclarative memory during consolidation, impairment of the fast/declarative component leads to improvements in the slow/nondeclarative component. Therefore, the fast process that supports formation of motor memory is not only neurally distinct from the slow process, but it shares critical resources with the declarative memory system.
支持人类运动适应的神经系统被认为与支持陈述性系统的神经系统不同。然而,在运动适应过程中,运动指令的变化是由一个快速适应过程支持的,这个过程具有重要的特性(快速学习、快速衰减),通常与陈述性系统有关。快速过程可以与缓慢的适应过程形成对比,后者也支持运动记忆,但它是逐渐学习的,并表现出对遗忘的抵抗力。在这里,我们表明,当人们停止执行一项运动任务后,参与陈述性记忆的任务可以破坏快速的运动记忆,但缓慢的运动记忆不受这种干扰。此外,我们发现快速/陈述性成分在缓慢的运动记忆的巩固中起着主要作用。由于在巩固过程中陈述性和非陈述性记忆之间的竞争性质,快速/陈述性成分的损伤会导致缓慢/非陈述性成分的改善。因此,支持运动记忆形成的快速过程不仅在神经上与缓慢过程不同,而且与陈述性记忆系统共享关键资源。