4.4 Article

Cerebellar Degeneration Impairs Strategy Discovery but Not Strategy Recall

Journal

CEREBELLUM
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12311-022-01500-6

Keywords

Motor learning; Visuomotor adaptation; Decision making; Cerebellar degeneration

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Funding

  1. NIH NINDS [NS116883, F31NS120448]

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In this study, the performance of individuals with cerebellar degeneration was tested on a variant of a visuomotor adaptation task. The results showed that individuals with cerebellar degeneration were slower in discovering an appropriate aiming strategy but exhibited similar recall of the aiming strategy compared to the control group. This highlights the multifaceted contributions of the cerebellum in sensorimotor learning.
The cerebellum is recognized to play a critical role in the automatic and implicit process by which movement errors are used to keep the sensorimotor system precisely calibrated. However, its role in other learning processes frequently engaged during sensorimotor adaptation tasks remains unclear. In the present study, we tested the performance of individuals with cerebellar degeneration on a variant of a visuomotor adaptation task in which learning requires the use of strategic re-aiming, a process that can nullify movement errors in a rapid and volitional manner. Our design allowed us to assess two components of this learning process, the discovery of an appropriate strategy and the recall of a learned strategy. Participants were exposed to a 60 degrees visuomotor rotation twice, with the initial exposure block assessing strategy discovery and the re-exposure block assessing strategy recall. Compared to age-matched controls, individuals with cerebellar degeneration were slower to derive an appropriate aiming strategy in the initial Discovery block but exhibited similar recall of the aiming strategy during the Recall block. This dissociation underscores the multi-faceted contributions of the cerebellum to sensorimotor learning, highlighting one way in which this subcortical structure facilitates volitional action selection.

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