4 research outputs found

    Motor Skill Learning, Retention, and Control Deficits in Parkinson's Disease

    Get PDF
    Parkinson's disease, which affects the basal ganglia, is known to lead to various impairments of motor control. Since the basal ganglia have also been shown to be involved in learning processes, motor learning has frequently been investigated in this group of patients. However, results are still inconsistent, mainly due to skill levels and time scales of testing. To bridge across the time scale problem, the present study examined de novo skill learning over a long series of practice sessions that comprised early and late learning stages as well as retention. 19 non-demented, medicated, mild to moderate patients with Parkinson's disease and 19 healthy age and gender matched participants practiced a novel throwing task over five days in a virtual environment where timing of release was a critical element. Six patients and seven control participants came to an additional long-term retention testing after seven to nine months. Changes in task performance were analyzed by a method that differentiates between three components of motor learning prominent in different stages of learning: Tolerance, Noise and Covariation. In addition, kinematic analysis related the influence of skill levels as affected by the specific motor control deficits in Parkinson patients to the process of learning. As a result, patients showed similar learning in early and late stages compared to the control subjects. Differences occurred in short-term retention tests; patients' performance constantly decreased after breaks arising from poorer release timing. However, patients were able to overcome the initial timing problems within the course of each practice session and could further improve their throwing performance. Thus, results demonstrate the intact ability to learn a novel motor skill in non-demented, medicated patients with Parkinson's disease and indicate confounding effects of motor control deficits on retention performance

    Sensitivity to Error Tolerant Solutions in a Redundant Virtual Throwing Task

    No full text
    It is suggested that when learning a redundant goaloriented motor task, people explore and choose error tolerant solutions of the task to reduce result variability. This assumption was tested with a virtual throwing task where the error tolerant solutions were designed such that subjects needed to recurrently adapt to a new tolerant solution in order to achieve high performance. We tested 13 participants who practiced the task over six days. All of them adapted to changes in error tolerant solutions although the absolute number of adaptations as well as the rate of adaptation varied strongly between subjects. Results are discussed with reference to motor noise and the integration of practice trials according to error probability
    corecore