Mirdamadi Jasmine L, Block Hannah J
Program in Neuroscience, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana.
Department of Kinesiology, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana.
J Neurophysiol. 2020 Mar 1;123(3):1052-1062. doi: 10.1152/jn.00497.2019. Epub 2020 Jan 29.
Trial-and-error motor adaptation has been linked to somatosensory plasticity and shifts in proprioception (limb position sense). The role of sensory processing in motor skill learning is less understood. Unlike adaptation, skill learning involves the acquisition of new movement patterns in the absence of perturbation, with performance limited by the speed-accuracy trade-off. We investigated somatosensory changes during motor skill learning at the behavioral and neurophysiological levels. Twenty-eight healthy young adults practiced a maze-tracing task, guiding a robotic manipulandum through an irregular two-dimensional track featuring several abrupt turns. Practice occurred on and . Skill was assessed before practice on and again on , with learning indicated by a shift in the speed-accuracy function between these assessments. Proprioceptive function was quantified with a passive two-alternative forced-choice task. In a subset of 15 participants, we measured short-latency afferent inhibition (SAI) to index somatosensory projections to motor cortex. We found that motor practice enhanced the speed-accuracy skill function ( = 32.15, < 0.001) and was associated with improved proprioceptive sensitivity at retention ( = 24.75, = 0.0031). Furthermore, SAI increased after training ( = 5.41, = 0.036). Interestingly, individuals with larger increases in SAI, reflecting enhanced somatosensory afference to motor cortex, demonstrated larger improvements in motor skill learning. These findings suggest that SAI may be an important functional mechanism for some aspect of motor skill learning. Further research is needed to test what parameters (task complexity, practice time, etc.) are specifically linked to somatosensory function. Somatosensory processing has been implicated in motor adaptation, where performance recovers from a perturbation such as a force field. We investigated somatosensory function during motor skill learning, where a new motor pattern is acquired in the absence of perturbation. After skill practice, we found changes in proprioception and short-latency afferent inhibition (SAI), signifying somatosensory change at both the behavioral and neurophysiological levels. SAI may be an important functional mechanism by which individuals learn motor skills.
试错式运动适应与体感可塑性及本体感觉(肢体位置觉)的变化有关。感觉加工在运动技能学习中的作用尚不太清楚。与适应不同,技能学习涉及在无扰动情况下获取新的运动模式,其表现受速度 - 准确性权衡的限制。我们在行为和神经生理水平上研究了运动技能学习过程中的体感变化。28名健康的年轻成年人练习了迷宫追踪任务,通过一个具有多个急转弯的不规则二维轨道引导一个机器人操作器。在[具体日期1]和[具体日期2]进行练习。在[具体日期3]练习前以及在[具体日期4]再次评估技能,两次评估之间速度 - 准确性函数的变化表明学习情况。通过被动二选一强制选择任务对本体感觉功能进行量化。在15名参与者的子集中,我们测量了短潜伏期传入抑制(SAI)以指示体感向运动皮层的投射。我们发现运动练习增强了速度 - 准确性技能函数(F = 32.15,p < 0.001),并且与保留时本体感觉敏感性的改善相关(t = 24.75,p = 0.0031)。此外,训练后SAI增加(t = 5.41,p = 0.036)。有趣的是,SAI增加幅度较大的个体,反映出体感向运动皮层的传入增强,其运动技能学习的改善也更大。这些发现表明SAI可能是运动技能学习某些方面的重要功能机制。需要进一步研究来测试哪些参数(任务复杂性、练习时间等)与体感功能具体相关。体感加工已被认为与运动适应有关,在运动适应中,表现可从诸如力场等扰动中恢复。我们研究了运动技能学习过程中的体感功能,在运动技能学习中是在无扰动情况下获取新的运动模式。技能练习后,我们发现本体感觉和短潜伏期传入抑制(SAI)发生了变化,这表明在行为和神经生理水平上都存在体感变化。SAI可能是个体学习运动技能的重要功能机制。