Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2013;8(2):e53990. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0053990. Epub 2013 Feb 5.
New visuomotor skills can guide behaviour in novel situations. Prior studies indicate that learning a visuospatial sequence via responses based on manual key presses leads to effector- and response-independent knowledge. Little is known, however, about the extent to which new sequence knowledge can generalise, and, thereby guide behaviour, outside of the manual response modality. Here, we examined whether learning a visuospatial sequence either via manual (key presses, without eye movements), oculomotor (obligatory eye movements), or perceptual (covert reorienting of visuospatial attention) responses supported generalisation to direct and indirect tests administered either in the same (baseline conditions) or a novel response modality (transfer conditions) with respect to initial study. Direct tests measured the use of conscious knowledge about the studied sequence, whereas the indirect tests did not ostensibly draw on the study phase and measured response priming. Oculomotor learning supported the use of conscious knowledge on the manual direct tests, whereas manual learning supported generalisation to the oculomotor direct tests but did not support the conscious use of knowledge. Sequence knowledge acquired via perceptual responses did not generalise onto any of the manual tests. Manual, oculomotor, and perceptual sequence learning all supported generalisation in the baseline conditions. Notably, the manual baseline condition and the manual to oculomotor transfer condition differed in the magnitude of general skill acquired during the study phase; however, general skill did not predict performance on the post-study tests. The results demonstrated that generalisation was only affected by the responses used to initially code the visuospatial sequence when new knowledge was applied to a novel response modality. We interpret these results in terms of response-effect distinctiveness, the availability of integrated effector- and motor-plan based information, and discuss their implications for neurocognitive accounts of sequence learning.
新的运动技能可以指导新情境下的行为。先前的研究表明,通过基于手动按键的反应来学习视空间序列会导致效应器和反应独立的知识。然而,对于新的序列知识在多大程度上可以概括并指导行为,超出手动反应模态之外,知之甚少。在这里,我们研究了通过手动(无眼动的按键按压)、眼动(强制性眼动)或知觉(隐蔽地重新定向视空间注意)反应来学习视空间序列,是否支持在初始学习的相同(基线条件)或新的反应模态(转移条件)下进行直接和间接测试的概括。直接测试测量了对所研究序列的有意识知识的使用,而间接测试则没有明显依赖于学习阶段,并测量了反应启动。眼动学习支持对手动直接测试的有意识知识的使用,而手动学习支持对眼动直接测试的概括,但不支持对知识的有意识使用。通过知觉反应获得的序列知识不能概括到任何手动测试中。手动、眼动和知觉序列学习都支持在基线条件下的概括。值得注意的是,在手动基线条件和手动到眼动转移条件之间,在学习阶段获得的一般技能的幅度有所不同;然而,一般技能并没有预测学习后的测试的表现。结果表明,只有当新知识应用于新的反应模态时,最初用于编码视空间序列的反应才会影响概括。我们根据反应-效应的独特性、基于效应器和运动计划的综合信息的可用性来解释这些结果,并讨论它们对序列学习的神经认知解释的影响。