Michail Georgios, Nikulin Vadim V, Curio Gabriel, Maess Burkhard, Herrojo Ruiz María
Neurophysics Group, Department of Neurology, Campus Benjamin Franklin, Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany.
Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, St. Hedwig Hospital, Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany.
Front Hum Neurosci. 2018 Jun 12;12:240. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2018.00240. eCollection 2018.
Music performance relies on the ability to learn and execute actions and their associated sounds. The process of learning these auditory-motor contingencies depends on the proper encoding of the serial order of the actions and sounds. Among the different serial positions of a behavioral sequence, the first and last (boundary) elements are particularly relevant. Animal and patient studies have demonstrated a specific neural representation for boundary elements in prefrontal cortical regions and in the basal ganglia, highlighting the relevance of their proper encoding. The neural mechanisms underlying the encoding of sequence boundaries in the general human population remain, however, largely unknown. In this study, we examined how alterations of auditory feedback, introduced at different ordinal positions (boundary or within-sequence element), affect the neural and behavioral responses during sensorimotor sequence learning. Analysing the neuromagnetic signals from 20 participants while they performed short piano sequences under the occasional effect of altered feedback (AF), we found that at around 150-200 ms post-keystroke, the neural activities in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) and supplementary motor area (SMA) were dissociated for boundary and within-sequence elements. Furthermore, the behavioral data demonstrated that feedback alterations on boundaries led to greater performance costs, such as more errors in the subsequent keystrokes. These findings jointly support the idea that the proper encoding of boundaries is critical in acquiring sensorimotor sequences. They also provide evidence for the involvement of a distinct neural circuitry in humans including prefrontal and higher-order motor areas during the encoding of the different classes of serial order.
音乐表演依赖于学习和执行动作及其相关声音的能力。学习这些听觉-运动偶联的过程取决于动作和声音序列顺序的正确编码。在行为序列的不同序列位置中,第一个和最后一个(边界)元素尤为重要。动物和患者研究已经证明前额叶皮质区域和基底神经节中边界元素有特定的神经表征,突出了其正确编码的相关性。然而,普通人群中序列边界编码的神经机制在很大程度上仍然未知。在本研究中,我们研究了在不同顺序位置(边界或序列内元素)引入的听觉反馈改变如何影响感觉运动序列学习过程中的神经和行为反应。在20名参与者在改变反馈(AF)的偶尔影响下执行简短钢琴序列时分析他们的神经磁信号,我们发现在按键后约150 - 200毫秒,背外侧前额叶皮质(DLPFC)和辅助运动区(SMA)的神经活动在边界和序列内元素上有所分离。此外,行为数据表明边界上的反馈改变导致更大的表现成本,例如后续按键中的更多错误。这些发现共同支持了边界的正确编码在获取感觉运动序列中至关重要的观点。它们还为人类中包括前额叶和高阶运动区在内的不同神经回路在不同类别的序列顺序编码过程中的参与提供了证据。