Abstract

The human ability to use different tools demonstrates our capability of forming and maintaining multiple, context-specific motor memories. Experimentally, this has been investigated in dual adaptation, where participants adjust their reaching movements to opposing visuomotor transformations. Adaptation in these paradigms occurs by distinct processes, such as strategies for each transformation or the implicit acquisition of distinct visuomotor mappings. Although distinct, transformation-dependent aftereffects have been interpreted as support for the latter, they could reflect adaptation of a single visuomotor map, which is locally adjusted in different regions of the workspace. Indeed, recent studies suggest that explicit aiming strategies direct where in the workspace implicit adaptation occurs, thus potentially serving as a cue to enable dual adaptation. Disentangling these possibilities is critical to understanding how humans acquire and maintain motor memories for different skills and tools. We therefore investigated generalization of explicit and implicit adaptation to untrained movement directions after participants practiced two opposing cursor rotations, which were associated with the visual display being presented in the left or right half of the screen. Whereas participants learned to compensate for opposing rotations by explicit strategies specific to this visual workspace cue, aftereffects were not cue sensitive. Instead, aftereffects displayed bimodal generalization patterns that appeared to reflect locally limited learning of both transformations. By varying target arrangements and instructions, we show that these patterns are consistent with implicit adaptation that generalizes locally around movement plans associated with opposing visuomotor transformations. Our findings show that strategies can shape implicit adaptation in a complex manner.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Visuomotor dual adaptation experiments have identified contextual cues that enable learning of separate visuomotor mappings, but the underlying representations of learning are unclear. We report that visual workspace separation as a contextual cue enables the compensation of opposing cursor rotations by a combination of explicit and implicit processes: Learners developed context-dependent explicit aiming strategies, whereas an implicit visuomotor map represented dual adaptation independent from arbitrary context cues by local adaptation around the explicit movement plan.

Highlights

  • Modern tools frequently require their users to operate under different visuomotor transformations

  • The fact that humans can switch between different devices, such as trackpads, phones, and tablets, without apparently having to relearn each transformation each time has been taken as evidence for separate memories of different visuomotor transformations that can be retrieved on the basis of context

  • Visuomotor dual adaptation has served as a model paradigm to understand how the brain associates contextual cues with separate memories and representations (Imamizu et al 2003; Wolpert and Kawato 1998)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Modern tools frequently require their users to operate under different visuomotor transformations. To gain more insight into the way explicit strategies and implicit learning interact in visuomotor dual adaptation, the present study sought to test whether the direction of explicit movement plans enables local learning of opposing cursor rotations by separating generalization and to contrast this possibility with a previous view under which the direction of the visual target is the relevant cue (Woolley et al 2011). Rotation directions, and verbal instruction of strategies, we tested whether generalization centered around the visual target (target-based generalization; Woolley et al 2011) or the explicit strategy (plan-based generalization; Day et al 2016; McDougle et al 2017) limits interference within a single, implicit visuomotor map

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