Doyon J, Laforce R, Bouchard G, Gaudreau D, Roy J, Poirier M, Bédard P J, Bédard F, Bouchard J P
Groupe de Recherche en Réadaptation physique, IRDPQ, Site Centre François-Charon, Québec, Canada.
Neuropsychologia. 1998 Jul;36(7):625-41. doi: 10.1016/s0028-3932(97)00168-1.
Recently, Doyon et al. [20] demonstrated that lesions to both the striatum and to the cerebellum in humans produce a similar deficit in the learning of a repeated visuomotor sequence, which occurs late in the acquisition process. We now report the results of two experiments that were designed to examine whether this impairment was due to a lack of automatization of the repeating sequence of finger movements by using a dual-task paradigm and by testing for long-term retention of this skill. In Experiment 1, the performance of groups of patients with Parkinson's disease, or with damage to the cerebellum or to the frontal lobes, was compared to that of matched control subjects on the Repeated Sequence Test (primary task) and the Brooks' Matrices Test (secondary task). These two tests were administered concomitantly in both early and late learning phases of the visuomotor sequence. Overall, the groups did not differ in their ability to execute the primary task. By contrast, in accordance with the predictions, patients in Stages 2-3 of Parkinson's disease or with a cerebellar lesion failed to reveal the expected increase in performance on the secondary task seen with learning, suggesting that the latter groups of patients did not have access to the same level of residual cognitive resources to complete the matrices compared to controls. In Experiment 2, the same groups of patients and control subjects were retested again 10-18 months later. They were given four blocks of 100 trials each of the repeating sequence task, followed by a questionnaire and a self-generation task that measured their declarative knowledge of that sequence. The results revealed a long-term retention impairment only in patients who changed from Stage I to Stage II of the disease (suggesting further striatal degeneration) during the one-year interval, or who had a cerebellar lesion. By contrast, performance of the three clinical groups did not differ from controls on declarative memory tests. These findings suggest that both the striatum and the cerebellum participate to the automatization process during the late (slow) learning stage of a sequence of finger movements and that these structures also play a role in the neuronal mechanism subserving long-term retention of such a motor sequence behavior.
最近,多扬等人[20]证明,人类纹状体和小脑的损伤在重复视觉运动序列学习中会产生类似的缺陷,这种缺陷出现在习得过程的后期。我们现在报告两项实验的结果,这两项实验旨在通过使用双任务范式并测试该技能的长期保持情况,来检验这种损伤是否是由于手指运动重复序列缺乏自动化所致。在实验1中,将帕金森病患者组、小脑或额叶受损患者组的表现与匹配的对照组受试者在重复序列测试(主要任务)和布鲁克斯矩阵测试(次要任务)中的表现进行比较。这两项测试在视觉运动序列的早期和晚期学习阶段同时进行。总体而言,各组在执行主要任务的能力上没有差异。相比之下,根据预测,帕金森病2 - 3期患者或小脑病变患者在次要任务上并未表现出随着学习而预期的表现提升,这表明与对照组相比,后一组患者在完成矩阵任务时无法获得相同水平的剩余认知资源。在实验2中,相同的患者组和对照组受试者在10 - 18个月后再次接受测试。他们被给予四个包含100次重复序列任务的组块,随后进行问卷调查和自我生成任务,以测量他们对该序列的陈述性知识。结果显示,只有在一年间隔期间从疾病I期转变为II期(表明纹状体进一步退化)的患者或患有小脑病变的患者存在长期保持障碍。相比之下,三个临床组在陈述性记忆测试中的表现与对照组没有差异。这些发现表明,纹状体和小脑在手指运动序列的后期(缓慢)学习阶段都参与了自动化过程,并且这些结构在支持这种运动序列行为长期保持的神经元机制中也发挥作用。