Department of Neurobiology, Physiology and Behavior, University of California, Davis, California.
Department of Neurology, University of California, Davis, California.
J Neurophysiol. 2022 Oct 1;128(4):854-871. doi: 10.1152/jn.00520.2021. Epub 2022 Aug 31.
Recent studies have shown that adaptation to visual feedback perturbations during arm reaching movements involves implicit and explicit learning components. Evidence also suggests that explicit, intentional learning mechanisms are largely responsible for savings-a faster recalibration compared with initial training. However, the extent explicit learning mechanisms facilitate learning and early savings (i.e., the rapid recall of previous performance) for motion state-dependent learning is generally unknown. To address this question, we compared the early savings/recall achieved by two groups of human subjects. One experienced physical perturbations (a velocity-dependent force-field, vFF) to promote adaptation that is thought to be a largely implicit process. The second was only given visual feedback of the required force-velocity relationship; subjects moved in force channels and we provided visual feedback of the lateral force exerted during the movement, as well as the required force pattern based on the movement velocity. Thus, subjects were shown explicit information on the extent the applied temporal pattern of force matched the required velocity-dependent force profile if the force-field perturbation had been applied. After training, both groups experienced a decay and washout period, which was followed by a reexposure block to assess early savings/recall. Although decay was faster for the explicit visual feedback group, the single-trial recall was similar to the physical perturbation group. Thus, compared with visual feedback perturbations, conscious modification of motor output based on motion state-dependent feedback demonstrates rapid recall, but this adjustment is less stable than adaptation based on experiencing the multisensory errors that accompany physical perturbations. The extent explicit feedback facilitates motion state-dependent changes to motor output is largely unknown. Here, we examined motor adaptation for subjects that experienced physical perturbations and another that made adjustments based on explicit visual feedback information of the required force-velocity relationship. Our results suggest that adjustment of motor output can be based on explicit motion state-dependent information and demonstrates rapid recall, but this learning is less stable than adaptation based on physical perturbations to movement.
最近的研究表明,手臂运动过程中对视觉反馈干扰的适应涉及内隐和外显学习成分。有证据表明,外显的、有意的学习机制在很大程度上负责节省——与初始训练相比,更快的重新校准。然而,外显学习机制在多大程度上促进运动状态相关学习的学习和早期节省(即,快速回忆以前的表现)尚不清楚。为了解决这个问题,我们比较了两组人类受试者的早期节省/回忆。一组经历了物理干扰(速度依赖力场,vFF),以促进被认为是一个主要内隐过程的适应。第二组只获得了所需力-速度关系的视觉反馈;受试者在力通道中移动,我们提供了运动过程中施加的横向力的视觉反馈,以及基于运动速度的所需力模式。因此,如果施加了力场干扰,受试者会看到有关施加的力时间模式与所需速度相关的力分布匹配程度的明确信息。训练后,两组都经历了衰减和冲洗期,然后重新暴露于块以评估早期节省/回忆。尽管外显视觉反馈组的衰减速度更快,但单次试验的回忆与物理干扰组相似。因此,与视觉反馈干扰相比,基于运动状态相关反馈的有意识修改运动输出表现出快速回忆,但这种调整不如基于体验伴随物理干扰的多感觉错误的适应稳定。外显反馈在多大程度上促进运动状态相关的运动输出变化尚不清楚。在这里,我们检查了经历物理干扰的受试者和另一个基于所需力-速度关系的明确视觉反馈信息进行调整的受试者的运动适应。我们的结果表明,运动输出的调整可以基于明确的运动状态相关信息,并表现出快速回忆,但这种学习不如基于对运动的物理干扰的适应稳定。