Vincent S. Huang and Reza Shadmehr (2007) Evolution of motor memory
during the seconds after observation of motor error. Journal
of Neurophysiology 97:3976-3985.
Abstract When a movement results in error, the
nervous system amends the motor commands that generate the subsequent
movement. Here we show that this
adaptation depends not just on error, but also on passage of time between the
two movements. We observed that
subjects learned a reaching task faster, i.e., with fewer trials, when the
inter-trial time intervals (ITIs) were lengthened. We hypothesized two computational
mechanisms that could have accounted for this. First, learning could have been driven
by a Bayesian process where the learner assumed that errors are due to
perturbations that have multiple timescales. In theory, longer ITIs can produce faster
learning because passage of time might increase uncertainty, which in turn
increases sensitivity to error.
Second, error in a trial may result in a trace that decays with time. If the learner continued to sample from
the trace during the ITI, then adaptation would increase with increased
ITIs. The two models made separate
predictions: The Bayesian model
predicted that when movements are separated by random ITIs, the learner would
learn most from a trial that followed a long time interval. In contrast, the trace model predicted
that the learner would learn most from a trial that preceded a long time
interval. We performed two
experiments to test for these predictions and in both experiments found
evidence for the trace model. We
suggest that motor error produce an error memory trace that decays with a time
constant of about 4 seconds, continuously promoting adaptation until the next
movement.
paper