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The effect of P arkinson's disease and H untington's disease on human visuomotor learning
Author(s) -
GutierrezGarralda Juan Manuel,
MorenoBriseño Pablo,
Boll MarieCatherine,
MorgadoValle Consuelo,
CamposRomo Aurelio,
Diaz Rosalinda,
FernandezRuiz Juan
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
european journal of neuroscience
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.346
H-Index - 206
eISSN - 1460-9568
pISSN - 0953-816X
DOI - 10.1111/ejn.12288
Subject(s) - motor learning , basal ganglia , neuroscience , prism adaptation , psychology , adaptation (eye) , central nervous system
Visuomotor adaptation is often driven by error‐based ( EB ) learning in which signed errors update motor commands. There are, however, visuomotor tasks where signed errors are unavailable or cannot be mapped onto appropriate motor command changes, rendering EB learning ineffective; and yet, healthy subjects can learn in these EB learning‐free conditions. While EB learning depends on cerebellar integrity, the neural bases of EB ‐independent learning are poorly understood. As basal ganglia are involved in learning mechanisms that are independent of signed error feedback, here we tested whether patients with basal ganglia lesions, including those with Huntington's disease and Parkinson's disease, would show impairments in a visuomotor learning task that prevents the use of EB learning. We employed two visuomotor throwing tasks that were similar, but were profoundly different in the resulting visual feedback. This difference was implemented through the introduction of either a lateral displacement of the visual field via a wedge prism ( EB learning) or a horizontal reversal of the visual field via a dove prism (non‐ EB learning). Our results show that patients with basal ganglia degeneration had normal EB learning in the wedge prism task, but were profoundly impaired in the reversing prism task that does not depend on the signed error signal feedback. These results represent the first evidence that human visuomotor learning in the absence of EB feedback depends on the integrity of the basal ganglia.