Predictive motor learning of temporal delays.
Citation:
Witney AG, Goodbody SJ, Wolpert DM., Predictive motor learning of temporal delays., Journal of Neurophysiology, 82, 5, 1999, 2039 - 2048Download Item:
Abstract:
Anticipatory responses can minimize the disturbances
that result from the action of one part of the body on another.
Such a predictive response is evident in the anticipatory increase in
grip force seen when one hand pulls on an object held in the other
hand, thereby preventing the object from slipping. It is postulated that
such a response depends on predicting the consequences of the descending
motor command, as signaled by efference copy, using an
internal model of both one?s own body and the object. Here we
investigate how the internal model learns the temporal consequences
of the motor command. We employed two robots to simulate a virtual
object held in one hand and acted on by the other. Delays were
introduced between the action of one hand on the object and the
effects of this action on the other hand. An initial reactive grip force
response to the delayed load decayed with the development of appropriate
anticipatory grip force modulation. However, no predictive
modulation was seen when the object?s movement was not generated
by the subject, even when the motion was cued by a tone. These
results suggest that, when an internal model learns new temporal
relationships between actions and their consequences, this learning
involves generating a novel response rather than adapting the original
predictive response.
Author's Homepage:
http://people.tcd.ie/awitneyDescription:
PUBLISHED
Author: WITNEY, ALICE
Type of material:
Journal ArticleCollections
Series/Report no:
Journal of Neurophysiology82
5
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Full text availableSubject:
PhysiologySubject (TCD):
NeuroscienceMetadata
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