Content area

Abstract

Humans spend a lifetime learning, storing and refining a repertoire of motor memories. For example, through experience, we become proficient at manipulating a large range of objects with distinct dynamical properties. However, it is unknown what principle underlies how our continuous stream of sensorimotor experience is segmented into separate memories and how we adapt and use this growing repertoire. Here we develop a theory of motor learning based on the key principle that memory creation, updating and expression are all controlled by a single computation-contextual inference. Our theory reveals that adaptation can arise both by creating and updating memories (proper learning) and by changing how existing memories are differentially expressed (apparent learning). This insight enables us to account for key features of motor learning that had no unified explanation: spontaneous recovery1, savings2, anterograde interference3, how environmental consistency affects learning rate4,5 and the distinction between explicit and implicit learning6. Critically, our theory also predicts new phenomena-evoked recovery and context-dependent single-trial learning-which we confirm experimentally. These results suggest that contextual inference, rather than classical single-context mechanisms1,4,7-9, is the key principle underlying how a diverse set of experiences is reflected in our motor behaviour.

Details

Title
Contextual inference underlies the learning of sensorimotor repertoires
Author
Heald, James B 1 ; Lengyel, Máté 2 ; Wolpert, Daniel M 1 

 Mortimer B. Zuckerman Mind Brain Behavior Institute, Columbia University, New York, NY, USA 
 Computational and Biological Learning Lab, Department of Engineering, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK 
Pages
489-2,493A-493S
Section
Article
Publication year
2021
Publication date
Dec 16, 2021
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
ISSN
00280836
e-ISSN
14764687
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2615896221
Copyright
Copyright Nature Publishing Group Dec 16, 2021