4.4 Article

Modulation of error-sensitivity during a prism adaptation task in people with cerebellar degeneration

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 114, Issue 4, Pages 2460-2471

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.00145.2015

Keywords

cerebellum; degenerative ataxia; cerebellar cortex

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology [23591270, 22390181, 22590954, 25119002]
  2. Catecholamine
  3. Magnetic Health Science Foundation
  4. Kato Memorial Trust for Nambyo Research, Japan
  5. Research Committee on Degenerative Ataxia from the Ministry of Health and Welfare of Japan
  6. Uehara Memorial Foundation
  7. Human Frontiers Science Program
  8. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke Grant [NS-078311]
  9. Novartis Foundation (Japan) for the Promotion of Science
  10. Neurological Disorders Symposium
  11. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [25119002, 23591270, 15H05881, 26461308, 25293206, 15H05871] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Cerebellar damage can profoundly impair human motor adaptation. For example, if reaching movements are perturbed abruptly, cerebellar damage impairs the ability to learn from the perturbation-induced errors. Interestingly, if the perturbation is imposed gradually over many trials, people with cerebellar damage may exhibit improved adaptation. However, this result is controversial, since the differential effects of gradual vs. abrupt protocols have not been observed in all studies. To examine this question, we recruited patients with pure cerebellar ataxia due to cerebellar cortical atrophy (n = 13) and asked them to reach to a target while viewing the scene through wedge prisms. The prisms were computer controlled, making it possible to impose the full perturbation abruptly in one trial, or build up the perturbation gradually over many trials. To control visual feedback, we employed shutter glasses that removed visual feedback during the reach, allowing us to measure trial-by-trial learning from error (termed error-sensitivity), and trial-by-trial decay of motor memory (termed forgetting). We found that the patients benefited significantly from the gradual protocol, improving their performance with respect to the abrupt protocol by exhibiting smaller errors during the exposure block, and producing larger aftereffects during the postexposure block. Trial-by-trial analysis suggested that this improvement was due to increased error-sensitivity in the gradual protocol. Therefore, cerebellar patients exhibited an improved ability to learn from error if they experienced those errors gradually. This improvement coincided with increased error-sensitivity and was present in both groups of subjects, suggesting that control of error-sensitivity may be spared despite cerebellar damage.

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