Abstract

Awareness of task demands is often used during rehabilitation and sports training by providing instructions which appears to accelerate learning and improve performance through explicit motor learning. However, the effects of awareness of perturbations on the changes in estimates of hand position resulting from motor learning are not well understood. In this study, people adapted their reaches to a visuomotor rotation while either receiving instructions on the nature of the perturbation, experiencing a large rotation, or both to generate awareness of the perturbation and increase the contribution of explicit learning. We found that instructions and/or larger rotations allowed people to activate or deactivate part of the learned strategy at will and elicited explicit changes in open-loop reaches, while a small rotation without instructions did not. However, these differences in awareness, and even manipulations of awareness and perturbation size, did not appear to affect learning-induced changes in hand-localization estimates. This was true when estimates of the adapted hand location reflected changes in proprioception, produced when the hand was displaced by a robot, and also when hand location estimates were based on efferent-based predictions of self-generated hand movements. In other words, visuomotor adaptation led to significant shifts in predicted and perceived hand location that were not modulated by either instruction or perturbation size. Our results indicate that not all outcomes of motor learning benefit from an explicit awareness of the task. Particularly, proprioceptive recalibration and the updating of predicted sensory consequences appear to be largely implicit. (data: https://doi.org/10.17605/osf.io/mx5u2, preprint: https://doi.org/10.31234/osf.io/y53c2)

Highlights

  • When performing movements, it is crucial to know the location of your limbs in space

  • Manipulating and measuring awareness of the perturbation during adaptation We set out to determine if visuomotor adaptation-related changes in hand localization, both due to proprioceptive recalibration and the updating of predicted consequences, were modified by awareness of the perturbation

  • We conducted a process dissociation procedure (PDP) to ensure that larger perturbations and instructions resulted in increased awareness of the perturbation

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Summary

Introduction

It is crucial to know the location of your limbs in space. Such estimates of limb position are based on two general sources. One is afferent based, relying on sensory feedback, primarily vision and proprioception, and the second is efferent based, simulating or predicting the consequences of motor commands [1].

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