Abstract

Animals acquire motor skills to better survive and adapt to a changing environment. The ability to learn novel motor actions without disturbing learned ones is essential to maintaining a broad motor repertoire. During motor learning, the brain makes a series of adjustments to build novel sensory–motor relationships that are stored within specific circuits for long-term retention. The neural mechanism of learning novel motor actions and transforming them into long-term memory still remains unclear. Here we review the latest findings with regard to the contributions of various brain subregions, cell types, and neurotransmitters to motor learning. Aiming to seek therapeutic strategies to restore the motor memory in relative neurodegenerative disorders, we also briefly describe the common experimental tests and manipulations for motor memory in rodents.

Highlights

  • Motor learning implies a process of change or improvement in motor action to perform the requested task by practicing and refining [1]

  • A clinical study of Parkinson’s disease (PD) patients of early stage with NFB training showed an improvement in motor speed during tasks as well as activation in subthalamic nucleus (STN) and GP, which are connected to supplementary motor area (SMA) [252]

  • We briefly reviewed the current discoveries of motor learning across rodent and clinical studies on the basis of neural circuitries and neurotransmitter systems in M1, basal ganglia (BG), and cerebellum involved in motor learning

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Summary

Introduction

Motor learning implies a process of change or improvement in motor action to perform the requested task by practicing and refining [1]. The basal ganglia, cerebellum, and motor cortex are the brain areas involved in motor learning through their circuits [5, 10,11,12]. SPECIFIC BRAIN SUBREGIONS AND CELL TYPES INVOLVED IN MOTOR SKILL LEARNING

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