Butcher Peter A, Ivry Richard B, Kuo Sheng-Han, Rydz David, Krakauer John W, Taylor Jordan A
Department of Psychology, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey;
Princeton Neuroscience Institute, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey.
J Neurophysiol. 2017 Sep 1;118(3):1622-1636. doi: 10.1152/jn.00451.2017. Epub 2017 Jun 21.
Individuals with damage to the cerebellum perform poorly in sensorimotor adaptation paradigms. This deficit has been attributed to impairment in sensory prediction error-based updating of an internal forward model, a form of implicit learning. These individuals can, however, successfully counter a perturbation when instructed with an explicit aiming strategy. This successful use of an instructed aiming strategy presents a paradox: In adaptation tasks, why do individuals with cerebellar damage not come up with an aiming solution on their own to compensate for their implicit learning deficit? To explore this question, we employed a variant of a visuomotor rotation task in which, before executing a movement on each trial, the participants verbally reported their intended aiming location. Compared with healthy control participants, participants with spinocerebellar ataxia displayed impairments in both implicit learning and aiming. This was observed when the visuomotor rotation was introduced abruptly () or gradually (). This dual deficit does not appear to be related to the increased movement variance associated with ataxia: Healthy undergraduates showed little change in implicit learning or aiming when their movement feedback was artificially manipulated to produce similar levels of variability (). Taken together the results indicate that a consequence of cerebellar dysfunction is not only impaired sensory prediction error-based learning but also a difficulty in developing and/or maintaining an aiming solution in response to a visuomotor perturbation. We suggest that this dual deficit can be explained by the cerebellum forming part of a network that learns and maintains action-outcome associations across trials. Individuals with cerebellar pathology are impaired in sensorimotor adaptation. This deficit has been attributed to an impairment in error-based learning, specifically, from a deficit in using sensory prediction errors to update an internal model. Here we show that these individuals also have difficulty in discovering an aiming solution to overcome their adaptation deficit, suggesting a new role for the cerebellum in sensorimotor adaptation tasks.
小脑受损的个体在感觉运动适应范式中表现不佳。这种缺陷被归因于基于感觉预测误差的内部前向模型更新受损,这是一种内隐学习形式。然而,当用明确的瞄准策略指导时,这些个体能够成功地应对扰动。这种对指导瞄准策略的成功运用提出了一个悖论:在适应任务中,为什么小脑受损的个体不能自己想出一个瞄准解决方案来弥补他们的内隐学习缺陷?为了探究这个问题,我们采用了一种视觉运动旋转任务的变体,在每次试验执行运动之前,参与者口头报告他们预期的瞄准位置。与健康对照参与者相比,脊髓小脑共济失调患者在隐式学习和瞄准方面均表现出损伤。当突然()或逐渐()引入视觉运动旋转时,均观察到这种情况。这种双重缺陷似乎与共济失调相关的运动变异性增加无关:当健康的大学生的运动反馈被人为操纵以产生相似水平的变异性()时,他们的内隐学习或瞄准几乎没有变化。综合这些结果表明,小脑功能障碍的一个后果不仅是基于感觉预测误差的学习受损,而且在应对视觉运动扰动时难以制定和/或维持一个瞄准解决方案。我们认为,这种双重缺陷可以通过小脑构成一个跨试验学习和维持动作-结果关联的网络的一部分来解释。小脑病变个体在感觉运动适应方面受损。这种缺陷被归因于基于误差的学习受损,具体而言,是由于在使用感觉预测误差更新内部模型方面存在缺陷。在这里,我们表明这些个体在发现克服其适应缺陷的瞄准解决方案方面也有困难,这表明小脑在感觉运动适应任务中具有新的作用。