Literature DB >> 27666970

Seeing the Errors You Feel Enhances Locomotor Performance but Not Learning.

Ryan T Roemmich1, Andrew W Long2, Amy J Bastian3.   

Abstract

In human motor learning, it is thought that the more information we have about our errors, the faster we learn. Here, we show that additional error information can lead to improved motor performance without any concomitant improvement in learning. We studied split-belt treadmill walking that drives people to learn a new gait pattern using sensory prediction errors detected by proprioceptive feedback. When we also provided visual error feedback, participants acquired the new walking pattern far more rapidly and showed accelerated restoration of the normal walking pattern during washout. However, when the visual error feedback was removed during either learning or washout, errors reappeared with performance immediately returning to the level expected based on proprioceptive learning alone. These findings support a model with two mechanisms: a dual-rate adaptation process that learns invariantly from sensory prediction error detected by proprioception and a visual-feedback-dependent process that monitors learning and corrects residual errors but shows no learning itself. We show that our voluntary correction model accurately predicted behavior in multiple situations where visual feedback was used to change acquisition of new walking patterns while the underlying learning was unaffected. The computational and behavioral framework proposed here suggests that parallel learning and error correction systems allow us to rapidly satisfy task demands without necessarily committing to learning, as the relative permanence of learning may be inappropriate or inefficient when facing environments that are liable to change.
Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  adaptation; feedback; gait; locomotion; motor learning; split-belt treadmill; walking

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27666970      PMCID: PMC5081226          DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2016.08.012

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Curr Biol        ISSN: 0960-9822            Impact factor:   10.834


  32 in total

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5.  Sensory prediction errors drive cerebellum-dependent adaptation of reaching.

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  31 in total

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6.  Using a Split-belt Treadmill to Evaluate Generalization of Human Locomotor Adaptation.

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Authors:  Kristan A Leech; Ryan T Roemmich
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9.  A Dual-Learning Paradigm Simultaneously Improves Multiple Features of Gait Post-Stroke.

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