Kodama Midori, Ono Takashi, Yamashita Fumio, Ebata Hiroki, Liu Meigen, Kasuga Shoko, Ushiba Junichi
Graduate School of Science and Technology, Keio University, Yokohama, Japan.
Saiseikai Higashikanagawa Rehabilitation Hospital, Yokohama, Japan.
Front Hum Neurosci. 2018 Jun 8;12:209. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2018.00209. eCollection 2018.
Recent studies have revealed rapid (e.g., hours to days) training-induced cortical structural changes using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Currently, there is great interest in studying how such a rapid brain structural change affects behavioral improvement. Structural reorganization contributes to memory or enhanced information processing in the brain and may increase its capability of skill learning. If the gray matter (GM) is capable of such rapid structural reorganization upon training, the extent of volume increase may characterize the learning process. To shed light on this issue, we conducted a case series study of 5-day visuomotor learning using neuroanatomical imaging, and analyzed the effect of rapid brain structural change on motor performance improvement via regression analysis. Participants performed an upper-arm reaching task under left-right mirror-reversal for five consecutive days; T1-weighted MR imaging was performed before training, after the first and fifth days, and 1 week and 1 month after training. We detected increase in GM volume on the first day (i.e., a few hours after the first training session) in the primary motor cortex (M1), primary sensory cortex (S1), and in the hippocampal areas. Notably, regression analysis revealed that individual differences in such short-term increases were associated with the learning levels after 5 days of training. These results suggest that GM structural changes are not simply a footprint of previous motor learning but have some relationship with future motor learning. In conclusion, the present study provides new insight into the role of structural changes in causing functional changes during motor learning.
最近的研究表明,使用磁共振成像(MRI)能够观察到训练引起的快速(例如,数小时至数天)皮质结构变化。目前,人们对研究这种快速的脑结构变化如何影响行为改善非常感兴趣。结构重组有助于大脑中的记忆或增强信息处理,并可能提高其技能学习能力。如果灰质(GM)在训练后能够发生如此快速的结构重组,那么体积增加的程度可能表征学习过程。为了阐明这个问题,我们使用神经解剖成像对为期5天的视觉运动学习进行了病例系列研究,并通过回归分析来分析快速脑结构变化对运动表现改善的影响。参与者连续五天在左右镜像反转的情况下执行上臂伸展任务;在训练前、第一天和第五天之后,以及训练后1周和1个月进行T1加权磁共振成像。我们在第一天(即第一次训练 session 后的几个小时)检测到初级运动皮层(M1)、初级感觉皮层(S1)和海马区域的灰质体积增加。值得注意的是,回归分析表明,这种短期增加的个体差异与5天训练后的学习水平相关。这些结果表明,灰质结构变化不仅仅是先前运动学习的痕迹,而是与未来的运动学习有某种关系。总之,本研究为运动学习过程中结构变化导致功能变化的作用提供了新的见解。