Nezafat R, Shadmehr R, Holcomb HH (2001) Long-Term Adaptation to
Dynamics of Reaching Movements: A PET Study. Experimental Brain Research,
140:66-76.
Abstract
Positron Emission
Tomography was used to examine changes in the cerebellum as subjects learned to
make movements with their right arm while holding the handle of a robot that
produced a force field. Brain images were acquired during learning and then
during recall at 2 and 4 weeks. We also acquired images during a control task
where the force field was not learnable and subjects did not show any
improvements across sessions. During the first day, we observed that motor
errors decreased from the control condition to the learning condition. However,
regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) in the posterior region of the right
cerebellar cortex initially increased from the control condition and then
gradually declined with reductions in motor error. Correspondingly, rCBF in the
ipsilateral deep cerebellar nuclei (DCN) initially decreased from the control
condition and then increased with reductions in motor error. If measures of
rCBF mainly reflect presynaptic activity of neurons, this result predicts that
DCN neurons fire with a pattern that starts high in the control task then
decreases as learning proceeds. Similarly, Purkinje cells should generally have
their lowest activity in the control task. This pattern is consistent with
neurophysiological recordings that find that cerebellar activity during early
learning of a motor task may mainly reflect changes in co-activation of muscles
of the limbs, rather than a learning specific signal. By the end of the first
session, motor errors had reached a minimum and no further improvements were
observed. However, across the weeks a region in the anterior cerebellar cortex
showed gradual decreases in rCBF that could not be attributed to changes in
motor performance. Because patterns of rCBF in the cortex and nuclei were
highly anti-correlated, we used structural equation modeling to estimate how
synaptic activity in the cerebellar cortex influenced synaptic activity in the
DCN. We found a negative correlation with a strength that significantly
increased during the 4 weeks. This suggests that during long-term recall, the
same input to the cerebellar cortex would produce less synaptic activity at the
DCN, suggesting that Purkinje cell firing activity was reduced across the
weeks.
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