Brudner Samuel N, Kethidi Nikhit, Graeupner Damaris, Ivry Richard B, Taylor Jordan A
Duke Institute for Brain Sciences, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina;
Department of Psychology, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey;
J Neurophysiol. 2016 Mar;115(3):1499-511. doi: 10.1152/jn.00066.2015. Epub 2016 Jan 20.
In sensorimotor adaptation tasks, feedback delays can cause significant reductions in the rate of learning. This constraint is puzzling given that many skilled behaviors have inherently long delays (e.g., hitting a golf ball). One difference in these task domains is that adaptation is primarily driven by error-based feedback, whereas skilled performance may also rely to a large extent on outcome-based feedback. This difference suggests that error- and outcome-based feedback may engage different learning processes, and these processes may be associated with different temporal constraints. We tested this hypothesis in a visuomotor adaptation task. Error feedback was indicated by the terminal position of a cursor, while outcome feedback was indicated by points. In separate groups of participants, the two feedback signals were presented immediately at the end of the movement, after a delay, or with just the error feedback delayed. Participants learned to counter the rotation in a similar manner regardless of feedback delay. However, the aftereffect, an indicator of implicit motor adaptation, was attenuated with delayed error feedback, consistent with the hypothesis that a different learning process supports performance under delay. We tested this by employing a task that dissociates the contribution of explicit strategies and implicit adaptation. We find that explicit aiming strategies contribute to the majority of the learning curve, regardless of delay; however, implicit learning, measured over the course of learning and by aftereffects, was significantly attenuated with delayed error-based feedback. These experiments offer new insight into the temporal constraints associated with different motor learning processes.
在感觉运动适应任务中,反馈延迟会导致学习速率显著降低。鉴于许多熟练行为本身就存在较长延迟(例如打高尔夫球),这种限制令人费解。这些任务领域的一个差异在于,适应主要由基于误差的反馈驱动,而熟练表现可能在很大程度上还依赖于基于结果的反馈。这种差异表明,基于误差和基于结果的反馈可能涉及不同的学习过程,并且这些过程可能与不同的时间限制相关。我们在一项视觉运动适应任务中对这一假设进行了测试。误差反馈由光标终点位置指示,而结果反馈由点数指示。在不同组的参与者中,两种反馈信号在运动结束时立即呈现、延迟呈现,或者仅延迟误差反馈。无论反馈延迟如何,参与者都以类似方式学习抵消旋转。然而,作为内隐运动适应指标的后效,在误差反馈延迟时会减弱,这与不同学习过程支持延迟情况下的表现这一假设一致。我们通过采用一项区分明确策略和内隐适应贡献的任务对此进行了测试。我们发现,无论延迟如何,明确的瞄准策略对大部分学习曲线都有贡献;然而,通过学习过程和后效测量的内隐学习,在基于误差的反馈延迟时会显著减弱。这些实验为与不同运动学习过程相关的时间限制提供了新的见解。