The role of plastic changes in the motor cortex and spinal cord for motor learning

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Adaptive changes of the efficacy of neural circuitries at different sites of the central nervous system is the basis of acquisition of new motor skills. Non-invasive human imaging and electrophysiological experiments have demonstrated that the primary motor cortex and spinal cord circuitries are key players in the early stages of skill acquisition and consolidation of motor learning. Expansion of the cortical representation of the trained muscles, changes in corticomuscular coupling and changes in stretch reflex activity are thus all markers of neuroplastic changes accompanying early skill acquisition. We have shown in recent experiments that sensory feedback from the active muscles play a surprisingly specific role at this stage of learning. Following motor skill training, repeated activation of sensory afferents from the muscle that has been involved in a previous training session, interfered with any improvement in task performance obtained during the training session, whereas activation of sensory afferents from other muscles that were not involved in the task had no effect. Similarly, training of a motor task involving a specific movement direction and muscle group completely abolished the consolidation of increased performance of a different previously trained task involving the same movement direction and muscle group, whereas training of other muscles had no effect. This emphasizes the role of specific sensory error signals in the acquisition of new motor skills and illustrates the functional importance of the primary motor cortex, corticospinal tract and spinal cord in the establishment of early motor memory.
OriginalsprogEngelsk
TidsskriftActa Physiologica (Print Edition)
Udgave nummerSuppl. 677
Sider (fra-til)19-20
Antal sider2
ISSN1748-1708
StatusUdgivet - 2010
BegivenhedJoint Meeting of the Scandinavian and German Physiological Societies - Copenhagen, Danmark
Varighed: 27 mar. 201030 mar. 2010

Konference

KonferenceJoint Meeting of the Scandinavian and German Physiological Societies
LandDanmark
ByCopenhagen
Periode27/03/201030/03/2010

Bibliografisk note

CURIS 2010 5200 080
Volumne: 198

ID: 19183078