Abstract

For more than two decades, there has been converging evidence for an essential role of the cerebellum in non-motor functions. The cerebellum is not only important in learning and sensorimotor processes, some growing evidences show its implication in conditional learning and reward, which allows building our expectations about behavioral outcomes. More recent work has demonstrated that the cerebellum is also required for the sense of agency, a cognitive process that allows recognizing an action as our own, suggesting that the cerebellum might serve as an interface between sensorimotor function and cognition. A unifying model that would explain the role of the cerebellum across these processes has not been fully established. Nonetheless, an important heritage was given by the field of motor control: the forward model theory. This theory stipulates that movements are controlled based on the constant interactions between our organism and its environment through feedforward and feedback loops. Feedforward loops predict what is going to happen, while feedback loops confront the prediction with what happened so that we can react accordingly. From an anatomical point of view, the cerebellum is at an ideal location at the interface between the motor and sensory systems, as it is connected to cerebral, striatal, and spinal entities via parallel loops, so that it can link sensory and motor systems with cognitive processes. Recent findings showing that the cerebellum participates in building the sense of agency as a predictive and comparator system will be reviewed together with past work on motor control within the context of the forward model theory.

Highlights

  • Over the past decades, there has been accumulating evidence suggesting that the role of the cerebellum goes far beyond motor control and involves a variety of cognitive tasks (Strick et al, 2009)

  • The local circuitry of the cerebellum is highly uniform across its different regions, suggesting that the diversity of cerebellar functions could rely on a single cerebellar computation that would be embedded in parallel cerebro-cerebellar loops (Diedrichsen et al, 2019)

  • The validity of the forward model has been questioned regarding the role of the cerebellum in cognitive processes (Sokolov et al, 2017; Diedrichsen et al, 2019), there is a growing body of evidence suggesting the role of the cerebellum in the sense of agency

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Summary

Introduction

There has been accumulating evidence suggesting that the role of the cerebellum goes far beyond motor control and involves a variety of cognitive tasks (Strick et al, 2009). In the comparator model of agency, which is derived from the forward model of motor control (Synofzik et al, 2008b; Haggard, 2017), the implicit feeling of agency results from a match between the intentional content of the action and the actual sensory feedback generated by the movement.

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