| Literature DB >> 22681696 |
Nicholas F Wymbs1, Danielle S Bassett, Peter J Mucha, Mason A Porter, Scott T Grafton.
Abstract
Motor chunking facilitates movement production by combining motor elements into integrated units of behavior. Previous research suggests that chunking involves two processes: concatenation, aimed at the formation of motor-motor associations between elements or sets of elements, and segmentation, aimed at the parsing of multiple contiguous elements into shorter action sets. We used fMRI to measure the trial-wise recruitment of brain regions associated with these chunking processes as healthy subjects performed a cued-sequence production task. A dynamic network analysis identified chunking structure for a set of motor sequences acquired during fMRI and collected over 3 days of training. Activity in the bilateral sensorimotor putamen positively correlated with chunk concatenation, whereas a left-hemisphere frontoparietal network was correlated with chunk segmentation. Across subjects, there was an aggregate increase in chunk strength (concatenation) with training, suggesting that subcortical circuits play a direct role in the creation of fluid transitions across chunks.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22681696 PMCID: PMC3372854 DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2012.03.038
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuron ISSN: 0896-6273 Impact factor: 17.173