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Can proprioceptive training improve motor learning?

Authors :
Alvin Chin
Paul L. Gribble
Jeremy D. Wong
Dinant A. Kistemaker
Movement Behavior
Research Institute MOVE
Source :
Journal of Neurophysiology, 108(12), 3313-3321. American Physiological Society, Wong, J D, Kistemaker, D A, Chin, A & Gribble, P L 2012, ' Can proprioceptive training improve motor learning? ', Journal of Neurophysiology, vol. 108, no. 12, pp. 3313-3321 . https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.00122.2012
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
American Physiological Society, 2012.

Abstract

Recent work has investigated the link between motor learning and sensory function in arm movement control. A number of findings are consistent with the idea that motor learning is associated with systematic changes to proprioception (Haith A, Jackson C, Mial R, Vijayakumar S. Adv Neural Inf Process Syst 21: 593-600, 2008; Ostry DJ, Darainy M, Mattar AA, Wong J, Gribble PL. J Neurosci 30: 5384-5393, 2010; Vahdat S, Darainy M, Milner TE, Ostry DJ. J Neurosci 31: 16907- 16915, 2011). Here, we tested whether motor learning could be improved by providing subjects with proprioceptive training on a desired hand trajectory. Subjects were instructed to reproduce both the time-varying position and velocity of novel, complex hand trajectories. Subjects underwent 3 days of training with 90 movement trials per day. Active movement trials were interleaved with demonstration trials. For control subjects, these interleaved demonstration trials consisted of visual demonstration alone. A second group of subjects received visual and proprioceptive demonstration simultaneously; this group was presented with the same visual stimulus, but, in addition, their limb was moved through the target trajectory by a robot using servo control. Subjects who experienced the additional proprioceptive demonstration of the desired trajectory showed greater improvements during training movements than control subjects who only received visual information. This benefit of adding proprioceptive training was seen in both movement speed and position error. Interestingly, additional control subjects who received proprioceptive guidance while actively moving their arm during demonstration trials did not show the same improvement in positional accuracy. These findings support the idea that the addition of proprioceptive training can augment motor learning, and that this benefit is greatest when the subject passively experiences the goal movement. © 2012 the American Physiological Society.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00223077
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Neurophysiology, 108(12), 3313-3321. American Physiological Society, Wong, J D, Kistemaker, D A, Chin, A & Gribble, P L 2012, ' Can proprioceptive training improve motor learning? ', Journal of Neurophysiology, vol. 108, no. 12, pp. 3313-3321 . https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.00122.2012
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7f3c0c9eda88a21f192f756f745f3cca
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.00122.2012