• Neuroscience · Dec 2021

    Motor Memory Consolidation after Augmented Variability Depends on the Space in which Variability is Introduced.

    • Mattia Pagano, Gaia Stochino, Maura Casadio, and Rajiv Ranganathan.
    • Department of Informatics, Bioengineering, Robotics and Systems Engineering, University of Genova, Genova, Italy.
    • Neuroscience. 2021 Dec 15; 479: 169-179.

    AbstractMotor memories undergo a period of consolidation before they become resistant to the practice of another task. Although movement variability is important in motor memory consolidation, its role is not fully understood in redundant tasks where variability can exist along two orthogonal subspaces (the 'task space' and the 'null space') that have different effects on task performance. Here, we used haptic perturbations to augment variability in these different spaces and examined their effect on motor memory consolidation. Participants learned a shuffleboard task, where they held a bimanual manipulandum and made a discrete throwing motion to slide a virtual puck towards a target. The task was redundant because the distance travelled by the puck was determined by the sum of the left and right hand speeds at release. After participants practiced the task, we used haptic perturbations to introduce motor variability in the task space or null space and examined consolidation of the original task on the next day. We found that regardless of the amplitude, augmenting variability in the task space resulted in significantly better consolidation relative to augmenting variability in the null space, but was not different from a control group that practiced with no variability. This benefit of increasing task space variability relative to increasing null space variability was likely due to the fact that it did not disrupt the pre-existing coordination strategy. These results suggest that the effects of variability on motor memory consolidation depend on the interplay between the induced variability and the pre-existing coordination strategy.Copyright © 2021 IBRO. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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