Cerebellar lesions impair context-dependent adaptation of reaching movements in primates

Citation
Rf. Lewis et Rj. Tamargo, Cerebellar lesions impair context-dependent adaptation of reaching movements in primates, EXP BRAIN R, 138(2), 2001, pp. 263-267
Citations number
21
Categorie Soggetti
Neurosciences & Behavoir
Journal title
EXPERIMENTAL BRAIN RESEARCH
ISSN journal
00144819 → ACNP
Volume
138
Issue
2
Year of publication
2001
Pages
263 - 267
Database
ISI
SICI code
0014-4819(200105)138:2<263:CLICAO>2.0.ZU;2-Y
Abstract
To produce accurate movements when conditions change suddenly, the brain mu st be capable of learning multiple versions of a given motor task and must be able to access the appropriate program using sensory information linked to the context of the movement. The neural basis for context-dependent moto r learning is uncertain, but the cerebellum is thought to play a fundamenta l role. In this study, we examined the effect of lesions of the dorsal verm al and paravermal cerebellar cortex on the adaptation of reaching movements produced by modified visual feedback and accessed with a visual cue. Two r hesus monkeys were trained to point to targets displayed on a video monitor while viewing monocularly with either eye. During the experimental session s, visual information received by one eye (the "modified" eye) was displace d horizontally, while the information received by the other ("normal") eye remained unaltered. In the first set of experiments (noncontextual paradigm ), the animals pointed to targets while viewing with the modified eye. This paradigm resulted in a gradual improvement in pointing accuracy when viewi ng with that eye, but also produced a shift in pointing responses of equiva lent size when viewing with the normal eye. In the second set of experiment s (contextual paradigm), the animals alternated six blocks of reaches while viewing monocularly with the modified eye with six blocks viewing with the normal eye. This paradigm improved the pointing accuracy when viewing with the modified eye, but produced only a small shift in pointing responses wh en viewing with the normal eye. After the dorsal vermal and paravermal cere bellar cortex were resected, no change occurred in the pattern of adaptatio n produced by the noncontextual paradigm. The contextual paradigm, however, no longer selectively adapted pointing responses for each eye, but rather produced a pointing shift of equivalent size when viewing with either eye. The results indicate that pointing responses can be differentially adapted for each viewing eye, which is a form of context-dependent motor learning. This capability was lost after focal lesions of the dorsal vermal and parav ermal cerebellar cortex, suggesting that these regions of cerebellar cortex are required to learn or store multiple representations of a movement, or to retrieve the appropriate motor program in a given sensory context.