Neville Kristin-Marie, Cressman Erin K
School of Human Kinetics, University of Ottawa, 75 Laurier Ave E, Ottawa, ON, K1N 6N5, Canada.
Exp Brain Res. 2018 Jul;236(7):2047-2059. doi: 10.1007/s00221-018-5282-7. Epub 2018 May 9.
Explicit (strategic) and implicit (unconscious) processes play a role in visuomotor adaptation (Bond and Taylor, J Neurophysiol 113:3836-3849, https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.00009.2015 , 2015; Werner et al., PLoS ONE 10:1-18, https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0123321 , 2015). We investigated the contributions of explicit and implicit processes to visuomotor adaptation when awareness was manipulated directly vs. indirectly, and asked how these contributions changed over time. Participants were assigned to a Strategy or No-Strategy group. Those in the Strategy group were made aware of the visuomotor distortion directly. Participants were further subdivided into groups to train with a large (60°), medium (40°) or small (20°) visuomotor distortion, providing the potential for awareness to develop indirectly. Participants reached with their respective distorted cursor, followed by a series of no-cursor reaches to assess the contributions of explicit and implicit processes to visuomotor adaptation after every 30 reach training trials. Within the no-cursor reaching trials, participants reached (1) with any strategies they had gained during training (explicit + implicit processes), and (2) as accurately to the target as possible (implicit processes). Results showed that implicit contributions were greatest in the No-Strategy group, took time to develop, and were transient, as partial decay was seen following a 5-min rest. As well, implicit contributions were similar (i.e., plateaued), regardless of the rotation size participants trained with. In contrast, explicit contributions were greatest in the Strategy group, increased with rotation size, and remained consistent over time. Taken together, results reveal that there are notable differences in the stability of explicit and implicit processes and their potential to contribute to visuomotor adaptation depending on if awareness is provided directly.
显性(策略性)和隐性(无意识)过程在视觉运动适应中发挥作用(邦德和泰勒,《神经生理学杂志》113:3836 - 3849,https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.00009.2015,2015;维尔纳等人,《公共科学图书馆·综合》10:1 - 18,https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0123321,2015)。我们研究了在直接与间接操纵意识时,显性和隐性过程对视觉运动适应的贡献,并询问这些贡献如何随时间变化。参与者被分为策略组或无策略组。策略组的参与者直接意识到视觉运动失真。参与者进一步细分为接受大(60°)、中(40°)或小(20°)视觉运动失真训练的组,这为间接形成意识提供了可能性。参与者使用各自失真的光标进行伸手动作,然后进行一系列无光标伸手动作,以在每30次伸手训练试验后评估显性和隐性过程对视觉运动适应的贡献。在无光标伸手试验中,参与者(1)运用他们在训练中获得的任何策略(显性 + 隐性过程)进行伸手动作,以及(2)尽可能准确地伸向目标(隐性过程)。结果表明,隐性贡献在无策略组中最大,需要时间来形成,并且是短暂的,因为在休息5分钟后会出现部分衰减。此外,无论参与者接受训练时的旋转大小如何,隐性贡献都是相似的(即达到平稳状态)。相比之下,显性贡献在策略组中最大,随旋转大小增加,并随时间保持一致。综合来看,结果表明,显性和隐性过程的稳定性以及它们对视觉运动适应的潜在贡献存在显著差异,这取决于意识是直接提供的还是间接提供的。