1. Somatosensory Contribution to the Initial Stages of Human Motor Learning.
- Author
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Bernardi, Nicolò F., Darainy, Mohammad, and Ostry, David J.
- Subjects
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SOMATOSENSORY cortex , *MOTOR learning , *MOTOR ability , *CONTINUOUS passive motion therapy , *REINFORCEMENT (Psychology) - Abstract
The early stages of motor skill acquisition are often marked by uncertainty about the sensory and motor goals of the task, as is the case in learning to speak or learning the feel of a good tennis serve. Herewepresent an experimental model of this early learning process, in which targets are acquired by exploration and reinforcement rather than sensory error. We use this model to investigate the relative contribution of motor and sensory factors to human motor learning. Participants make active reaching movements or matched passive movements to an unseen target using a robot arm. We find that learning through passive movements paired with reinforcement is comparable with learning associated with active movement, both in terms of magnitude and durability, with improvements due to training still observable at a 1 week retest. Motor learning is also accompanied by changes in somatosensory perceptual acuity. No stable changes in motor performance are observed for participants that train, actively or passively, in the absence of reinforcement, or for participants who are given explicit information about target position in the absence of somatosensory experience. These findings indicate that the somatosensory system dominates learning in the early stages of motor skill acquisition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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