Hadjiosif Alkis M, Gibo Tricia L, Smith Maurice A
bioRxiv. 2024 Apr 12:2023.08.11.553008. doi: 10.1101/2023.08.11.553008.
The cerebellum is critical for sensorimotor learning. The specific contribution that it makes, however, remains unclear. Inspired by the classic finding that, for declarative memories, medial temporal lobe structures provide a gateway to the formation of long-term memory but are not required for short-term memory, we hypothesized that, for sensorimotor memories, the cerebellum may play an analogous role. Here we studied the sensorimotor learning of individuals with severe ataxia from cerebellar degeneration. We dissected the memories they formed during sensorimotor learning into a short-term temporally-volatile component, that decays rapidly with a time constant of just 15-20sec and thus cannot lead to long-term retention, and a longer-term temporally-persistent component that is stable for 60 sec or more and leads to long-term retention. Remarkably, we find that these individuals display dramatically reduced levels of temporally-persistent sensorimotor memory, despite spared and even elevated levels of temporally-volatile sensorimotor memory. In particular, we find both impairment that systematically increases with memory window duration over shorter memory windows (<12 sec) and near-complete impairment of memory maintenance over longer memory windows (>25 sec). This dissociation uncovers a new role for the cerebellum as a gateway for the formation of long-term but not short-term sensorimotor memories, mirroring the role of the medial temporal lobe for declarative memories. It thus reveals the existence of distinct neural substrates for short-term and long-term sensorimotor memory, and it explains both newly-identified trial-to-trial differences and long-standing study-to-study differences in the effects of cerebellar damage on sensorimotor learning ability.
A key discovery about the neural underpinnings of memory, made more than half a century ago, is that long-term, but not short-term, memory formation depends on neural structures in the brain's medial temporal lobe (MTL). However, this dichotomy holds only for declarative memories - memories for explicit facts such as names and dates - as long-term procedural memories - memories for implicit knowledge such as sensorimotor skills - are largely unaffected even with substantial MTL damage. Here we demonstrate that the formation of long-term, but not short-term, sensorimotor memory depends on a neural structure known as the cerebellum, and we show that this finding explains the variability previously reported in the extent to which cerebellar damage affects sensorimotor learning.
小脑对感觉运动学习至关重要。然而,它所起的具体作用仍不清楚。受经典研究结果的启发,即对于陈述性记忆而言,内侧颞叶结构为长期记忆的形成提供了一个通道,但短期记忆并不需要它,我们推测,对于感觉运动记忆,小脑可能发挥类似的作用。在这里,我们研究了患有小脑变性导致严重共济失调的个体的感觉运动学习。我们将他们在感觉运动学习过程中形成的记忆分解为一个短期的随时间变化的易变成分,其以仅15 - 20秒的时间常数迅速衰减,因此不能导致长期保留,以及一个长期的随时间持续存在的成分,该成分在60秒或更长时间内稳定并导致长期保留。值得注意的是,我们发现这些个体的长期持续感觉运动记忆水平显著降低,尽管短期随时间变化的感觉运动记忆水平未受影响甚至有所提高。特别是,我们发现随着记忆窗口持续时间在较短记忆窗口(<12秒)内系统地增加存在损伤,而在较长记忆窗口(>25秒)内记忆维持几乎完全受损。这种分离揭示了小脑作为长期而非短期感觉运动记忆形成的通道的新作用,这与内侧颞叶对陈述性记忆的作用相呼应。因此,它揭示了短期和长期感觉运动记忆存在不同的神经基质,并解释了新发现的逐次试验差异以及长期以来不同研究中关于小脑损伤对感觉运动学习能力影响的差异。
半个多世纪前关于记忆神经基础的一个关键发现是,长期记忆而非短期记忆的形成依赖于大脑内侧颞叶(MTL)中的神经结构。然而,这种二分法仅适用于陈述性记忆——对诸如名字和日期等明确事实的记忆——因为即使MTL受到大量损伤,长期程序性记忆——对诸如感觉运动技能等隐性知识的记忆——在很大程度上也不受影响。在这里,我们证明长期而非短期感觉运动记忆的形成依赖于一种称为小脑的神经结构,并且我们表明这一发现解释了先前报道的小脑损伤对感觉运动学习影响程度的变异性。