4.4 Article

Beside the point: motor adaptation without feedback-based error correction in task-irrelevant conditions

期刊

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
卷 107, 期 4, 页码 1247-1256

出版社

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.00273.2011

关键词

visual feedback; sensory prediction error

资金

  1. National Institutes of Health [T32 HD007434, R01 NS057813, R01 HD055851]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Schaefer SY, Shelly IL, Thoroughman KA. Beside the point: motor adaptation without feedback-based error correction in task-irrelevant conditions. J Neurophysiol 107: 1247-1256, 2012. First published December 7, 2011; doi:10.1152/jn.00273.2011.-Adaptation of movement may be driven by the difference between planned and actual motor performance, or the difference between expected and actual sensory consequences of movement. To identify how the nervous system differentially uses these signals, we asked: does motor adaptation occur when movement errors are irrelevant to the task goal? Participants reached on a digitizing tablet from a fixed start location to one of three targets: a point, an arc, or a ray. For the arc, reaches could be in any direction, but to a specific extent. For the ray, reaches could be to any distance, but in a targeted direction. After baseline reaching to the point, the direction or extent of continuous visual feedback was perturbed during training with either a cursor rotation or gain, respectively, while reaching to either the ray (goal = direction) or the arc (goal = extent). The perturbation, therefore, was either relevant or irrelevant to the task goal, depending on target type. During interspersed catch trials, the perturbation was removed and the target switched back to the point, identical to baseline. Although the goal of baseline and catch trials was the same, significant aftereffects in catch trials indicated behavioral adaptation in response to the perturbation. Adaptation occurred regardless of whether the perturbation was relevant to the task, and it was independent of feedback control. The presence of adaptation orthogonal to task demands supports the hypothesis that the nervous system can rely on sensory prediction to drive motor learning that can generalize across tasks.

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