Krakauer JW, Mazzoni P, Ghazizadeh A, Ravindran R, and Shadmehr R
(2006) Generalization of motor learning depends on history of prior
action. PLoS Biology, 4:e316
Abstract Generalization of motor learning
refers to our ability to apply what has been learned in one context to other
contexts.
When
generalization is beneficial, it is termed transfer, and when it is
detrimental, it is termed interference. Insight into the mechanism of
generalization may be acquired from understanding why training transfers in
some contexts but not others. However, identifying relevant contextual cues has
proven surprisingly difficult, perhaps because the search has mainly been for
cues that are explicit. We hypothesized instead that a relevant contextual cue
is an implicit memory of action with a particular body part. To test this
hypothesis we considered a task in which participants learned to control motion
of a cursor under visuomotor rotation in two contexts: by moving their hand
through motion of their shoulder and elbow, or through motion of their wrist.
Use of these contextual cues led to three observations: First, in naive
participants, learning in the wrist context was much faster than in the arm
context. Second, generalization was asymmetric so that arm training benefited
subsequent wrist training, but not vice versa. Third, in people who had prior
wrist training, generalization from the arm to the wrist was blocked. That is,
prior wrist training appeared to prevent both the interference and transfer
that subsequent arm training should have caused. To explain the data, we
posited that the learner collected statistics of contextual history: all upper
arm movements also move the hand, but occasionally we move our hands without
moving the upper arm. In a Bayesian framework, history of limb segment use
strongly affects parameter uncertainty, which is a measure of the covariance of
the contextual cues. This simple Bayesian prior dictated a generalization
pattern that largely reproduced all three findings. For motor learning, generalization
depends on context, which is determined by the statistics of how we have
previously used the various parts of our limbs.
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