Abstract

Several canonical experimental paradigms (e.g., serial reaction time task, discrete sequence production task, m × n task) have been proposed to study the typical behavioral phenomenon and the nature of learning in sequential keypress tasks. A characteristic feature of most paradigms is that they are representative of externally-specified sequencing—motor tasks where the environment or task paradigm extrinsically provides the sequence of stimuli, i.e., the responses are stimulus-driven. Previous studies utilizing such canonical paradigms have largely overlooked the learning behaviors in a more realistic class of motor tasks that involve internally-guided sequencing—where the sequence of motor actions is self-generated or internally-specified. In this work, we use the grid-navigation task as an instance of internally-guided sequencing to investigate the nature of learning in such paradigms. The participants performed Grid-Sailing Task (GST), which required navigating (by executing sequential keypresses) a 5 × 5 grid from start to goal (SG) position while using a particular key-mapping (KM) among the three cursor-movement directions and the three keyboard buttons. The participants performed two behavioral experiments—Single-SG and Mixed-SG condition. The Single-SG condition required performing GST on a single SG position repeatedly, whereas the Mixed-SG condition involved performing GST using the same KM on two novel SG positions presented in a random, inter-mixed manner. In the Single-SG condition, we show that motor learning contributes to the sequence-specific learning in GST with the repeated execution of the same trajectories. In the Mixed-SG condition, since the participants utilize the previously learned KM, we anticipate a transfer of learning from the Single-SG condition. The acquisition and transfer of a KM-specific internal model facilitates efficient trajectory planning on novel SG conditions. The acquisition of such a KM-specific internal model amounts to trajectory-independent cognitive learning in GST. We show that cognitive learning contributes to the learning in GST by showing transfer-related performance improvements in the Mixed-SG condition. In sum, we show the role of cognitive and motor learning processes in internally-guided sequencing and further make a case for using GST-like grid-navigation paradigms in investigating internally guided skill learning.

Highlights

  • Our everyday experiences are an excellent demonstration of the surprisingly adaptive and fluid learning behavior that is orchestrated by the human brain

  • The Single-start to goal (SG) condition included a visuomotor rotation trial to probe if the performance improvements in Grid-sailing task (GST) can be solely attributed to general motor improvements

  • The performance degradation on execution time and other measures such as reward, reaction time, and error rate suggests that the performance improvements in GST can be attributed to the sequence-specific learning processes

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Summary

Introduction

Our everyday experiences are an excellent demonstration of the surprisingly adaptive and fluid learning behavior that is orchestrated by the human brain. Much of the early interest in motor sequencing focused on investigating the typical behavioral phenomenon in sequence learning tasks (Lashley, 1951; Hebb, 1961; Fitts and Posner, 1967) This has led to the formulation of many serial order canonical experimental tasks such as the m × n task (Hikosaka et al, 1995; Bapi et al, 2000, 2006) and discrete sequence production (DSP) task (Verwey, 2001; Abrahamse et al, 2013; Verwey et al, 2015) in the explicit domain and serial reaction time (SRT) task (Nissen and Bullemer, 1987; Willingham, 1999; Robertson, 2007) in the implicit domain. Subsequent research has extensively used these paradigms to understand the brain processes involved in sequence learning, memory, attention, etc

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