Article

Brain plasticity related to the consolidation of motor sequence learning and motor adaptation.

Functional Neuroimaging Unit, Centre de Recherche de l'Institut Gériatrique, Université de Montréal, Montreal, QC, Canada H3W 1W5.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (impact factor: 9.68). 09/2010; 107(41):17839-44. DOI:10.1073/pnas.1013176107 pp.17839-44
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT This study aimed to investigate, through functional MRI (fMRI), the neuronal substrates associated with the consolidation process of two motor skills: motor sequence learning (MSL) and motor adaptation (MA). Four groups of young healthy individuals were assigned to either (i) a night/sleep condition, in which they were scanned while practicing a finger sequence learning task or an eight-target adaptation pointing task in the evening (test) and were scanned again 12 h later in the morning (retest) or (ii) a day/awake condition, in which they were scanned on the MSL or the MA tasks in the morning and were rescanned 12 h later in the evening. As expected and consistent with the behavioral results, the functional data revealed increased test-retest changes of activity in the striatum for the night/sleep group compared with the day/awake group in the MSL task. By contrast, the results of the MA task did not show any difference in test-retest activity between the night/sleep and day/awake groups. When the two MA task groups were combined, however, increased test-retest activity was found in lobule VI of the cerebellar cortex. Together, these findings highlight the presence of both functional and structural dissociations reflecting the off-line consolidation processes of MSL and MA. They suggest that MSL consolidation is sleep dependent and reflected by a differential increase of neural activity within the corticostriatal system, whereas MA consolidation necessitates either a period of daytime or sleep and is associated with increased neuronal activity within the corticocerebellar system.

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Keywords

corticocerebellar system
 
corticostriatal system
 
day/awake condition
 
day/awake group
 
differential increase
 
eight-target adaptation
 
finger sequence
 
functional MRI
 
lobule VI
 
MA task
 
MA tasks
 
motor adaptation
 
motor sequence
 
motor skills
 
MSL consolidation
 
neuronal substrates
 
night/sleep condition
 
night/sleep group
 
test-retest changes
 
young healthy individuals