4.2 Article

Concurrent adaptation to opposing visuomotor rotations by varying hand and body postures

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL BRAIN RESEARCH
Volume 233, Issue 12, Pages 3433-3445

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00221-015-4411-9

Keywords

Motor learning; Dual adaptation; Visuomotor rotation; Reaching; Internal model; Cerebellum

Categories

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council
  2. German Research Foundation (DFG) [HA 6861/2-1]

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When reaching towards objects, the human central nervous system (CNS) can actively compensate for two different perturbations simultaneously (dual adaptation), though this does not simply occur upon presentation. Dual adaptation is made more difficult when the desired trajectories and targets are identical and hence do not cue the impending perturbation. In cases like these, the CNS requires contextual cues in order to predict the dynamics of the environment. Not all cues are effective at facilitating dual adaptation. In two experiments, we investigated the efficacy of two contextual cues that are intrinsic to the CNS, namely hand as well as body posture in concurrently adapting to two opposing visuomotor rotations. For the hand posture experiment, we also look at the role of extended training. Participants reached manually to visual targets with their unseen hand represented by a cursor that was rotated either 30A degrees clockwise or counterclockwise, determined randomly on each reach. Each rotation was associated with a distinct hand posture (a precision or power grip, respectively) in one experiment and a distinct body rotation (10A degrees leftward or rightward turn of the seat, respectively, while fixating straight) in the second experiment. Critically, the targets (and thus, the required cursor trajectories) were identical in both rotations. We found that how people held the tool or oriented their body while reaching is sufficient for concurrently adapting separate visuomotor mappings such that over time, reach errors significantly decrease. Extended practice did not lead to further benefits though. These findings suggest that when the required cursor movements are identical for different visuomotor mappings, dual adaptation is still possible given sufficient intrinsic contextual cues.

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