Acquisition of internal models of motor tasks in autism.
Gidley-Larson, Bastian, Donchin, Shadmehr, and Mostofsky (2008) Brain.
Abstract Children with autism exhibit a host of
motor disorders including poor coordination, poor tool use, and delayed
learning of complex motor skills like riding a tricycle. Theory suggests that one of the crucial
steps in motor learning is the ability to form internal models: to predict the
sensory consequences of motor commands and learn from errors to improve
performance on the next attempt.
The cerebellum appears to be an important site for acquisition of
internal models, and indeed the development of the cerebellum is abnormal in
autism. Here, we examined autistic
children on a range of tasks that required a change in the motor output in
response to a change in the environment. We first considered a prism
adaptation task in which the visual map of the environment was shifted. The children were asked to throw balls
to visual targets with and without the prism goggles. We next considered a reaching task that
required moving the handle of a novel tool (a robotic arm). The tool either imposed forces on the
hand or displaced the cursor associated with the handle position. In all tasks, the children with
autism adapted their motor output by forming a predictive internal model, as
exhibited through after-effects.
Surprisingly, the rates of acquisition and washout were
indistinguishable from normally developing children. Therefore, the mechanisms of acquisition
and adaptation of internal models in self-generated movements appeared normal
in autism. Sparing of adaptation
suggests that alternative mechanisms contribute to impaired motor skill
development in autism. Furthermore,
the findings may have therapeutic implications, highlighting a reliable
mechanism by which children with autism can most effectively alter their
behavior.
paper