Howard Ian S, Wolpert Daniel M, Franklin David W
Centre for Robotics and Neural Systems, University of Plymouth, Portland Square, Plymouth PL4 8AA UK.
Computational and Biological Learning Lab, Department of Engineering, University of Cambridge, Trumpington Street, Cambridge CB2 1PZ, UK.
Curr Biol. 2015 Feb 2;25(3):397-401. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2014.12.037. Epub 2015 Jan 8.
In ball sports, we are taught to follow through, despite the inability of events after contact or release to influence the outcome [1, 2]. Here we show that the specific motor memory active at any given moment critically depends on the movement that will be made in the near future. We demonstrate that associating a different follow-through movement with two motor skills that normally interfere [3-7] allows them to be learned simultaneously, suggesting that distinct future actions activate separate motor memories. This implies that when learning a skill, a variable follow-through would activate multiple motor memories across practice, whereas a consistent follow-through would activate a single motor memory, resulting in faster learning. We confirm this prediction and show that such follow-through effects influence adaptation over time periods associated with real-world skill learning. Overall, our results indicate that movements made in the immediate future influence the current active motor memory. This suggests that there is a critical time period both before [8] and after the current movement that determines motor memory activation and controls learning.
在球类运动中,我们被教导要完成随挥动作,尽管在接触或释放球之后发生的事情无法影响结果[1,2]。在这里,我们表明在任何给定时刻活跃的特定运动记忆关键取决于不久的将来将要做出的动作。我们证明,将不同的随挥动作与两种通常会相互干扰的运动技能[3-7]相关联,可以使它们同时被学习,这表明不同的未来动作会激活不同的运动记忆。这意味着在学习一项技能时,可变的随挥动作会在整个练习过程中激活多个运动记忆,而一致的随挥动作会激活单一的运动记忆,从而导致学习速度更快。我们证实了这一预测,并表明这种随挥动作效应会在与现实世界技能学习相关的时间段内影响适应性。总体而言,我们的结果表明不久的将来做出的动作会影响当前活跃的运动记忆。这表明在当前动作之前[8]和之后都有一个关键时间段,该时间段决定运动记忆的激活并控制学习。