Title of article :
Acquisition of a new bimanual coordination pattern modulates the cerebral activations elicited by an intrinsic pattern: An fMRI study
Author/Authors :
Rémy، نويسنده , , Florence and Wenderoth، نويسنده , , Nicole and Lipkens، نويسنده , , Karen and Swinnen، نويسنده , , Stephan P.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages :
12
From page :
482
To page :
493
Abstract :
Intensive practice of a new complex motor skill results in progressive improvement of performance. This induces neuroplastic changes, reflecting the transition from attention-demanding to more automatic performance throughout the learning. In the present fMRI study, learning-related cerebral activation changes during the acquisition of a new complex bimanual coordination pattern were examined, i.e., the 90° out-of-phase pattern (90Φ). Furthermore, we investigated whether practice of this new pattern influenced the neural correlates associated with performance of a preferred intrinsic pattern. Twelve young healthy subjects were intensively trained on the 90Φ task, and underwent two fMRI scanning sessions in early (PRE) and late (POST) learning. Scanning sessions included performance of the trained 90Φ pattern, as well as the nontrained intrinsic in-phase pattern (InΦ). Kinematics registered during training and scanning experiments showed that the new 90Φ pattern was acquired successfully, resulting in learning-related brain activation changes. Activation decreases were observed in the right prefrontal cortex (DLPFC and dorsal premotor), in the right middle temporal and occipital cortices and in the posterior cerebellum. Conversely, increases were found in the basal ganglia and hippocampus. Interestingly, activity elicited by the InΦ task also evidenced within-subjects PRE/POST differences (although kinematics InΦ performance was equivalent in both sessions). In particular, the learning-related decreases found for the 90Φ pattern in the cerebellum, the occipital and temporal gyri were similarly observed for the intrinsic InΦ pattern. Moreover, InΦ performance induced PRE/POST increases of activity in the left superior frontal gyrus. Our fMRI results suggest that intensive practice of a new complex coordination pattern impacted, at least temporarily, on the neural correlates of preferred intrinsic coordination patterns. Additional neural recruitment might reflect increased mental effort to prevent negative transfer from the learned mode onto the intrinsic coordination mode.
Keywords :
FMRI , motor learning , Bimanual Coordination
Journal title :
Cortex
Serial Year :
2008
Journal title :
Cortex
Record number :
2299927
Link To Document :
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