4.5 Review

Multiple Motor Learning Processes in Humans: Defining Their Neurophysiological Bases

Journal

NEUROSCIENTIST
Volume 27, Issue 3, Pages 246-267

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/1073858420939552

Keywords

motor learning; physiology; brain stimulation; TMS; skill learning

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Learning new motor behaviors involves multiple distinct neural substrates, which can be understood through formation of internal models and positive reinforcement. Noninvasive brain stimulation techniques can provide insights into the underlying motor learning processes. Different physiological mechanisms contribute differently to recalibrating previously learned movements and acquiring new motor control policies, with contributions changing based on the time course of learning and type of behaviors being learned.
Learning new motor behaviors or adjusting previously learned actions to account for dynamic changes in our environment requires the operation of multiple distinct motor learning processes, which rely on different neuronal substrates. For instance, humans are capable of acquiring new motor patterns via the formation of internal model representations of the movement dynamics and through positive reinforcement. In this review, we will discuss how changes in human physiological markers, assessed with noninvasive brain stimulation techniques from distinct brain regions, can be utilized to provide insights toward the distinct learning processes underlying motor learning. We will summarize the findings from several behavioral and neurophysiological studies that have made efforts to understand how distinct processes contribute to and interact when learning new motor behaviors. In particular, we will extensively review two types of behavioral processes described in human sensorimotor learning: (1) a recalibration process of a previously learned movement and (2) acquiring an entirely new motor control policy, such as learning to play an instrument. The selected studies will demonstrate in-detail how distinct physiological mechanisms contributions change depending on the time course of learning and the type of behaviors being learned.

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