Spampinato, Danny, and Pablo Celnik. "Multiple motor learning processes in humans: defining their neurophysiological bases." The Neuroscientist 27.3 (2021): 246-267.
June 8, 2023
Introduction
- Humans are capable of learning and acquiring knowledge for performing new motor tasks.
- Multiple learning processes have been identified as contributors to this learning process:
- Error-based learning (EBL)
- Use dependent learning (UDL)
- Reinforcement learning. (RL)
- Cognitive strategies (CG)
- These processes are posited to have distinct neural substrates and computations, involving the cerebral cortex, cerebellum, and striatum.
- The current challenge for motor learning research is to confidently disentangle each form of learning and their respective physiological mechanisms.
- Behavioural manipulations can be used to potentially weight these different forms of learning differently to isolate them; although this is not always possible.
- Techniques like TMS and tDCS can be used for probing the neural substrate to identify the circuits that might be involved in the different forms of learning.
Error-based learning
- One of the most basic forms of learning; plays a major role in motor adaptation, which allows us to perform accurate movements in the face of changing environments and our bodies.
- Short-term form of learning.
- Operates through a predictive mechanism, in particulate sensory-prediction error, which gives the details of how an expected movement has failed.
- Sensory predictions are produced by forward models (motor activation in, the expected limb kinematics out), and sensory prediction error (SPE) can be used to calibrate the internal models.
- Learning happens on a trial-by-trial basis, and learning is evident even in a single trial.
- The cerebellum plays a critical role in error-driven, forward internal models, generating sensory predictions and encoding the sensory prediction errors for updating the forward (and also inverse?) internal models.
- Individuals with cerebellar pathology exhibit significant impairment in EBL.
- Animal models have shown that the Purkinje cells of the cerebellum might be involved in forward model learning; one study found that the Purkinje cell activity was related to the arm kinematic rather than the actual motor command sent to the arm.
- Human Neurophysiological Studies of EBL
- Paired TMS is used to measure changes in connectivity between the cerebellum and the M1 cortex - “cerebellar inhibition”.
- Cerebellum (Purkinje cells in lobule VII and VIII) $\longrightarrow$ Inhibitory connection to the deep cerebellar nuclei (DCN) $\longrightarrow$ Excitatory connection to the M1.
- CBI reflects the normal inhibitory tone that the cerebellum exhibits over M1 via that thalamus.