Thoroughman KA, Shadmehr R (2000) Learning of action through
adaptive combination of motor primitives. Nature, 407:742-747.
Abstract
Understanding how
the brain constructs movements remains a fundamental challenge in neuroscience.
The brain may control complex movements through flexible combination of motor
primitives, where each primitive is an element of computation in the sensorimotor
map that transforms desired limb trajectories into motor commands. Theoretical
studies have shown that a system's ability to learn action depends on the shape
of its primitives. Using a time-series analysis of error patterns, here we show
that humans learn the dynamics of reaching movements through a flexible
combination of primitives that have gaussian-like tuning functions encoding
hand velocity. The wide tuning of the inferred primitives predicts limitations
on the brain's ability to represent viscous dynamics. We find close agreement
between the predicted limitations and the subjects' adaptation to new force
fields. The mathematical properties of the derived primitives resemble the
tuning curves of Purkinje cells in the cerebellum. The activity of these cells
may encode primitives that underlie the learning of dynamics.
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