Song Youngjo, Shin Wooree, Kim Pyeongsoo, Jeong Jaeseung
Department of Bio and Brain Engineering, College of Engineering, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST), Daejeon, South Korea.
Program of Brain and Cognitive Engineering, College of Engineering, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST), Daejeon, South Korea.
Front Hum Neurosci. 2023 Sep 26;17:1221944. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2023.1221944. eCollection 2023.
The human brain's remarkable motor adaptability stems from the formation of context representations and the use of a common context representation (e.g., an invariant task structure across task contexts) derived from structural learning. However, direct evaluation of context representations and structural learning in sensorimotor tasks remains limited. This study aimed to rigorously distinguish neural representations of visual, movement, and context levels crucial for multi-context visuomotor adaptation and investigate the association between representation commonality across task contexts and adaptation performance using multivariate decoding analysis with fMRI data. Here, we focused on three distinct task contexts, two of which share a rotation structure (i.e., visuomotor rotation contexts with -90° and +90° rotations, in which the mouse cursor's movement was rotated 90 degrees counterclockwise and clockwise relative to the hand-movement direction, respectively) and the remaining one does not (i.e., mirror-reversal context where the horizontal movement of the computer mouse was inverted). This study found that visual representations (i.e., visual direction) were decoded in the occipital area, while movement representations (i.e., hand-movement direction) were decoded across various visuomotor-related regions. These findings are consistent with prior research and the widely recognized roles of those areas. Task-context representations (i.e., either -90° rotation, +90° rotation, or mirror-reversal) were also distinguishable in various brain regions. Notably, these regions largely overlapped with those encoding visual and movement representations. This overlap suggests a potential intricate dependency of encoding visual and movement directions on the context information. Moreover, we discovered that higher task performance is associated with task-context representation commonality, as evidenced by negative correlations between task performance and task-context-decoding accuracy in various brain regions, potentially supporting structural learning. Importantly, despite limited similarities between tasks (e.g., rotation and mirror-reversal contexts), such association was still observed, suggesting an efficient mechanism in the brain that extracts commonalities from different task contexts (such as visuomotor rotations or mirror-reversal) at multiple structural levels, from high-level abstractions to lower-level details. In summary, while illuminating the intricate interplay between visuomotor processing and context information, our study highlights the efficiency of learning mechanisms, thereby paving the way for future exploration of the brain's versatile motor ability.
人类大脑卓越的运动适应性源于情境表征的形成以及对通过结构学习获得的共同情境表征(例如,跨任务情境的不变任务结构)的运用。然而,在感觉运动任务中对情境表征和结构学习的直接评估仍然有限。本研究旨在严格区分对多情境视觉运动适应至关重要的视觉、运动和情境水平的神经表征,并使用功能磁共振成像(fMRI)数据的多变量解码分析来研究跨任务情境的表征共性与适应表现之间的关联。在此,我们聚焦于三种不同的任务情境,其中两种共享一种旋转结构(即 -90°和 +90°旋转的视觉运动旋转情境,其中鼠标光标的运动分别相对于手部运动方向逆时针和顺时针旋转90度),而另一种则不共享(即计算机鼠标水平运动被反转的镜像反转情境)。本研究发现,视觉表征(即视觉方向)在枕叶区域被解码,而运动表征(即手部运动方向)在各种与视觉运动相关的区域被解码。这些发现与先前的研究以及那些区域被广泛认可的作用相一致。任务情境表征(即 -90°旋转、+90°旋转或镜像反转)在各个脑区也可被区分。值得注意的是,这些区域在很大程度上与编码视觉和运动表征的区域重叠。这种重叠表明编码视觉和运动方向对情境信息存在潜在的复杂依赖性。此外,我们发现更高的任务表现与任务情境表征共性相关,这在各个脑区任务表现与任务情境解码准确性之间的负相关中得到证明,这可能支持结构学习。重要的是,尽管任务之间的相似性有限(例如,旋转和镜像反转情境),但仍观察到这种关联,这表明大脑中存在一种高效机制,能够在从高级抽象到低级细节的多个结构层面上,从不同任务情境(如视觉运动旋转或镜像反转)中提取共性。总之,在阐明视觉运动处理与情境信息之间复杂的相互作用的同时,我们的研究突出了学习机制的效率,从而为未来探索大脑的多功能运动能力铺平了道路。